2 6726 
. D4 

jCopy 1 

Descriptive Catalogue of 

Selected Military 
Books 

An Authoritative Guide to Military 
Literature 


Prepared by 

COLONEL JAMES A. MOSS 
United States Army 
(Retired) 

With the assistance of some of the ablest 
historians and best-known military stu¬ 
dents of the United States Army. 




"BOOK SERVICE fOR THE ARMY” 
















Magazines 

Newpapers 

Fiction 

Magazines, newspapers, and fiction are right 
in our line, constituting an important part of 
our business, for which we have special fa¬ 
cilities. 

Magazines and Newspapers. We handle orig¬ 
inal subscriptions and renewal subscriptions 
to magazines and newspapers of every de¬ 
scription. Our magazine clubbing offers pre¬ 
sent big bargains. Let us send you one of our 
catalogues of special “Magazine Bargains.” 

Fiction. The selection and procurement of 
books of Fiction, latest and other, constitutes 
a considerable part of our work. We make a 
specialty of selecting, recommending and pro¬ 
curing books of Fiction for Company and 
other libraries. Let us give you the benefit of 
this special service. 


Address all orders and communications to — 

BOOK DEPARTMENT 

The Quartermaster Association 

1624 H Street N.W. 
Washington, D. C. 


Copyright 1924 
by 

The Quartermaster Association 

©C1A778299 








EXPLANATORY 


Q2 


J^HIS CATALOGUE of selected books, which is also an au¬ 
thoritative guide to military literature, was carefully pre¬ 
pared with the assistance of several of the ablest and best-read 
officers of the Army,—officers of experience, known in the 
O Service as military students. 

None but the best books are listed, and of these only a 
comparatively limited number on any given subject, the idea 
being to place before our officers of the Regular Army, Na¬ 
tional Guard, and Organized Reserves, a comparatively short 
list of titles carefully selected by experts, thus facilitating selec¬ 
tion, guaranteeing quality, and encouraging the procurement 
and reading of standard books that will improve officers pro¬ 
fessionally. 

The Chiefs of Infantry, Cavalry, Field Artillery, Engineers, 
Ordnance, Signal Corps, Medical Department, Chemical War¬ 
fare Service, Finance, and Air Service, selected the books per¬ 
taining primarily to subjects which officers of their respective 
branches of the Service should know. 

The books on general subjects, such as military history, 
strategy, tactics, etc., with which all officers should be 
conversant, were selected with the assistance of some of the 
ablest historians and best-known military students of the 
Regular Army. 

War Department and other Government publications are not 
listed in this Catalogue, because it is contrary to regulations 
for dealers to handle them. 

Foreign publications are indicated by asterisks (*). They 
must generally be imported and are sometimes subject to duty. 
About 4 weeks is usually required for importation. The prices 
quoted include carriage. Duty is extra, except when otherwise 
specified. Due to the delay in receiving information from sev¬ 
eral foreign publishers, the current prices of a few books are 
omitted in this catalogue. We can obtain them at the lowest 
prevailing cost. Prices will be quoted on request. 

Additional copies of this catalogue will gladly be supplied 
gratis on request. 


ARMY COOPERATIVE BOOK CLUB 

Defined. The Army Cooperative Book Club is a profit-sharing 
book service placed at the disposal of all individuals and 
organizations of the Army of the United States who are mem¬ 
bers of the Club. 

Conditions of Membership. Any individual or organization of 
the Army of the United States,—Regular, National Guard, 
or Organized Reserves,—ordering $5 or more worth of BOOKS 
at one time automatically becomes a member of The Army 
Cooperative Book Club. 

Saving. Members of The Army Cooperative Book Club effect 
a saving of 5 per cent on all BOOKS, beginning with the 
first order of $5 or more, subject to the following special 
provisions, which are made to eliminate additional bookkeeping 
and other clerical expense: 

1. Remittances must accompany orders. 

2. The discount of 5 per cent must be deducted from 

amount of order by the member himself when 
the order is sent. 

(NOTE. The saving of 5 per cent is allowed on BOOKS only. 
Due to our narrow margin of profit on magazines and news¬ 
papers, we are unable to allow this saving on periodicals. 
However, by means of attractive combination or clubbing offers, 
listed in a special catalogue that will be furnished on request, 
members can save considerably more than 5 per cent in the 
case of many leading magazines.) 



“BOOK SERVICE FOR THE ARMY” 


As the Quartermaster Corps feeds, clothes, shelters, and trans¬ 
ports the whole Army, so does the Book Department of The 
Quartermaster Association offer to serve the entire Army of the 
United States,—Regular Army, National Guard, and Organ¬ 
ized Reserves,—as regards military and other books, magazines, 
and other periodicals. So, our motto is, “Book Service for the 
Army.” 

By reason of liaison with the Army War College Library 
(the greatest military library in America) and the Congres¬ 
sional Library (one of the greatest libraries in the world) the 
Book Department of The Quartermaster Association, which is 
under the management of one of the Country’s best known 
military authors and military-book experts, is able to render 
service that can be equalled by few book concerns in this 
Country, and that is excelled by none. 

How We Can Render Service 

1st. Giving expert advice on the selection of books, 
military or other, for individual, organization, and 
library requirements, and furnishing information 
of all kinds regarding books of whatever nature. 

2d. Selecting books for courses of military study or 
' reading. 

This service is rendered gratuitously, without charge or obli¬ 
gation of any kind. 

Make Us Your Book Broker 

By making us your Book Broker—that is, by getting all 
your books, magazines, and other publications through us— 
you will save time, trouble, and money; because— 

1. You place your order for any number or variety of 
books and periodicals with one letter (or order 
blank), make only one remittance and use only one 
stamp. 

2. You have only one place to send inquiries concern¬ 
ing books ordered and to send adjustment requests 
for any irregularities of service during the existence 
of your magazine and newspaper subscriptions. 

3. In placing your orders or subscriptions, you are 
assured of prompt and efficient service by an or¬ 
ganization that is maintained primarily for your 
convenience. 

4. You are helping a Service association whose aims 
and purposes are in the interest of the National 
Defense, thereby yourself assisting the cause of 
National Defense. 


TABLE OF CONTENTS 

(See page 34 for Index and page 47 for Order Blank) 

Pagea 

Administration . 4 

Aeronautics . 4 

Art of War. 5 

Cavalry . 6 

Chemical Warfare . 7 

Coast Artillery . 7 

Customs of the Service. 8 

Engineering . 8 

Field Artillery . 9 

Finance . 9 

Fortification . 10 

HISTORY: 

General History of the World. 10 

General History of the United States: 

(a) From discovery to 1914. 11 

(b) By Periods: 

(1) Colonial Period . 11 

(2) Revolutionary Period . 11 

Military History: 

(a) General . 12 

(b) By wars: 

(1) American wars (except World War) : 

Colonial . 12 

Revolutionary War . 12 

War of 1812. 12 

Mexican War . 12 

Civil War . 12 

Spanish-American War . 14 

Philippine Insurrection . 14 

Boxer Rebellion, 1900. 14 

(2) Wars other than American: 

Early Wars . 14 

Marlborough’s Campaigns (1702-1711)... 14 

Seven Year’s War (1756-1763). 14 

Napoleonic Wars (1793-1815).. 14 

Crimean War (1854-1856). 15 

Austro-Prussian War(1866) . 15 

Franco-German War (1870) . 15 

Russo-Turkish War (1877). 15 

Sudan (Kartoum) (1855-1898).... 15 

Chinese-Japanese War (1894-1895). 15 

Boer War (1899-1901). 15 

Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905). 15 

(3) World War: 

General . 16 

Precedents to the War. 17 

Consequences of the War. 17 

Economics of the War. 18 

Western Theatre . 18 

Eastern Theatre . 18 

Southern Theatre (Italy, Greece, Balkans) 18 
Southeastern Theatre (Palestine, Meso¬ 
potamia, Persia and Arabia).-19 

East and Southwest Africa. 19 

Naval operations . 19 

Hygiene, Sanitation and Health. 19’ 

Infantry . 20 

Infantry School Publications. 20 

Languages (English, Spanish and French). 21 

Law . 22 

Logistics . 22 

Machine Guns . 23 

Map Reading and Map Making. 23 

Military Geography . 23 

Musketry and Small Arms. 23 

National Guard . 23 

Ordnance . 23 

Organization . 24 

Patriotism . 24 

Psychology and Leadership. 25 

QUARTERMASTER: 

(a) Construction . 25 

(b) Clothing and Textiles. 25 

(c) Food . 26 

(d) Remount Service . 26 

(e) Transportation: 

(1) Motor . 26 

(2) Water . 27 

(f) Miscellaneous . 27 

Signalling and Communication. 28 

Strategy . 28 

Tactics . 29 

Tanks . . .• • • 29 

War . 29 

Banta Military Publications. 30 

Miscellaneous . 32 










































































4 


ADMINISTRATION—AERONAUTICS 


ADMINISTRATION 

ENGLISH OF MILITARY COMMUNICATIONS. By Major 
William A. Ganoe, Infantry, U. S. A., formerly Assistant 
Professor of English, U. S. Military Academy. (197 pages) 
(1918) Correct use of language and concise and accurate 
expression in writing of messages, orders, and other communi¬ 
cations are fully covered. An excellent book on an important 
subject. $1.25 

ARMY PAPERWORK. By Colonel James A. Moss, U. S. 
Army. (400 pages) (1924) A comprehensive working guide 
in Army administration. Numerous “model” letters, indorse¬ 
ments, reports, returns, etc., together with complete list of 
all reports, returns, estimates and requisitions to be sub¬ 
mitted by company commanders and others. The most ex¬ 
haustive work ever published on Army paperwork. (Present 
edition out of date. Revised edition due from press about June 
1, 1924.) . $2.50 

OFFICERS’ MANUAL. By Colonel James A. Moss. (Revised 
edition due from press May 1, 1924.) A complete, invaluable 
guide in all matters concerning social and official customs of 
the Service and the duties of company officers, adjutants, quar¬ 
termasters, surveying officers, summary court officers, and other 
officers. A compendium of practical suggestions and worth 
knowing ideas concerning nearly all phases of Army life and 
administration, indicating the things that should be done as 
well as those that should not be done in r rder to attain 
efficiency and success in the military profession. For many 
years considered the “What’s What” of the Army. Over 200,000 
copies have been sold.....$3.00 

AERONAUTICS 

(Recommended by Chief of Aik Service) 

AERIAL NAVIGATION. By Zahm. (485 pages) (1911) Por¬ 
trays in popular terms the substantial progress of aeronautics 
from its earliest beginning to 1912. A substantial portion of 
the book is devoted to the development of lighter-than-air 
craft. $4.00 

AEROPLANE STRUCTURES. By Pippard and Pritchard. (359 
pages) (1919) A technical work, dealing in an authoritative 
way with the applications of well-established engineering 
principles. $7.50 

AIR NAVIGATION. By Card. (140 pages) (1919) An elemen¬ 
tary treatment of pilotage in navigation over land, illustrated 
with charts and diagrams. 3.40 

AIRPLANE ENGINE ENCYCLOPEDIA. By Angle. (547 pages) 
(1921) An alphabetically arranged compilation of all avail¬ 
able data on the world’s airplane engines, intended to serve as 
,a reference book to those interested in any phase of airplane 
engine design and construction. $7.50 

APPLIED AERODYNAMICS. By Thompson. (292 pages) 
(1919) Specializes upon aerodynamics as a branch of engineer¬ 
ing. Part 1 begins with a general outline, takes up physical 
theory, experimental methods, and structure of the various 
parts. Part 2 deals with stability and control.$12.50 

FLIGHT WITHOUT FORMULAE. By Duchene. (211 pages) 
(.1914) Treats in simple language of the principles and prob¬ 
lems of flight and of the mechanics of the aeroplane.$3.25 

HISTORY OF AERONAUTICS. By Vivian, Marsh and Lock- 
wood. (521 pages) (1921) A record of how the aeroplane has 
been evolved. Stories of the Wright brothers and Santos- 
Dumont, taken largely from their own accounts, and a short 
bibliography.$5.00 

INTRODUCTORY METEOROLOGY. Prepared and issued 
under the auspices of the Division of Geology and Geography, 
National Research Council. (150 pages) (1918) Covers briefly 
instruments, temperature, atmosphere, atmospheric optics, 
clouds and fogs, forecasting and climate, illustrated with 
diagrams and plates. $1.00 

OUR AIR FORCE. By Brigadier General William Mitchell. 
(223 pages) (1921) Shows development of aeronautics in the 
World War, demonstrating value as a weapon of defense and 
offense. Outlines plans for future development.$5.00 


“Mawy times the reading of a book has made the future of a 
man” —Emerson. 
















5 


AERONAUTICS—ART OF WAR 


COMMERCIAL AIRSHIP. By Pratt. (235 pages) (1920) 
Author is Chief Engineer of the Airship Department of 
Messrs. Vickers, Ltd. Work is non-technical, showing develop¬ 
ment and demonstrating feasibility of the use of lighter-than- 
air craft for commercial purposes. $6.50 

SIMPLIFIED NAVIGATION. By Poor. (126 pages) (1918) 
Extends in a practical way the science of mathematics and 
astronomy as applied to navigation of the sea, to the problem 
of navigation of the air. $1.75 

THEORY AND PRACTICE OF AEROPLANE DESIGN. By 

Andrews and Benson. (466 pages) (1920) Is in simple and 
easily understood language and is illustrated with sketches and 
diagrams. Should be useful to designers, aeronautical drafts¬ 
men and students. $7.00 


ART OF WAR 

(See also under “Strategy” and under “Tactics”) 

In speaking of the art of war, Napoleon gave the following 
advice as a means of acquiring a knowledge of leadership: 

“Read and reread the campaigns of Alexander, Han¬ 
nibal, Gustavus Adolphus, Turenne, Eugene of Savoy, 
and Frederick the Great. Model yourself on them. This 
is the only means of becoming a great captain and of 
discovering the secrets of the art. Evolutions, the 
science of the engineer and of the artillerist may be 
learned from treatises, as geometry is learned, but 
leadership can be acquired only by experience and by 
the study of the history of the wars of the great 
captains.” ill 

To those who would know and learn the art of war as 
practiced by some of the world’s greatest captains, the follow¬ 
ing standard works are recommended. 

HANNIBAL. By Colonel Theodote A. Dodge, U. S. A. (2 
Vols.—332+682 pages) (1891) .Per volume $5.00 

ALEXANDER. By Colonel Theodore A. Dodge, U. S. A. (2 
Vols.—352+692 pages) (1890) Per volume $5.00 

GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS. By Colonel Theodore A. Dodge, 
U. S. A. (2 Vols.—420+851 pages) (1890) Per volume $5.00 

CAESAR. By Colonel Theodore A. Dodge, U. S. A. (2 Vols.— 
380+789 pages) (1892) .Per volume $5.00 

NAPOLEON. By Colonel Theodore A. Dodge, U. S. A. (4 
Vols.—620+562+747+808 pages) (Vols. I and II, 1904 ; Vols. 
Ill and IV, 1907) .Per volume $5.00 

GREAT CAPTAINS. By Colonel Theodore A. Dodge, U. S. A. 
(219 pages) (1889) Six lectures, showing the influence on the 
art of war of the campaigns of Alexander, Hannibal, Caesar, 
Gustavus Adolphus, Frederick and Napoleon. $3.00 

ON WAR. By Carl von Clausewitz. (3 Vols. — 314+415+348 
pages) (1918) A great military classic ; a deep and philosophical 
analysis of war; the basis of modern military thought; the 
“Blackstone” of modern military study. No one can really 
talk the military language without a knowledge of Clause¬ 
witz. $14.00 

*WAR ACCORDING TO CLAUSEWITZ. By Major General T. 
D. Pilcher, British Army. (258 pages) (1918) A summary of 
Clausewitz’s “On War”, in more or less popular style. Covers 
the nature and theory of war ; strategy in general ; the com¬ 
bat.$3.00, including duty. 

THE PRINCIPLES OF WAR. By Marshal Foch. (372 pages) 
(1918) Summary of lectures delivered to the French Staff 
College when Marshal Foch was a lieutenant colonel, being a 
discussion of certain fundamental points in the conduct of 
troops. $4.00 

*THE NATION IN ARMS. By General von der Goltz. (475 
pages) (1913) One of the best books ever written on military 
psychology, a'nd the principles underlying the training and the 
employment of men and material in modern war, giving a 
clear and correct conception of the nature of war. A military 
classic. $2.80, plus duty. 


Join the Army Cooperative Book Club and save money. See 
“Army Cooperative Book Club,” page 1. 

















ART OF WAR—CAVALRY 


NAPOLEON’S MAXIMS OF WAR. With notes by General 
Burnod. (146 pages) No officer should be without this little 
book. “Stonewall” Jackson always carried a copy in his 
saddlebags. $0.50 

THE SOUL AND BODY OF AN ARMY. By Sir Ian Hamilton, 
British Army. (303 pages) (1921) Deals with organization, 
discipline, training, genius, patriotism, and other subjects. 
Excellent. $5.00 

*THE OPERATIONS OF WAR. By General Sir Edward Bruce 
Hamley, British Army. (420 pages) (1909) Although the 
latest edition deals mostly with strategical teachings, it includes 
tactical studies. A great work. 

THE WAR OF POSITIONS. By Lieutenant Colonel Paul Azan, 
French Army. (186 pages) (1917) An able, clear, and readable 
presentation of the fundamental principles of the war of 
positions, or trench warfare. $1.25 

THE CONDUCT OF WAR. By General Colmar von der Goltz. 
(148 pages) (1896) A standard, giving a brief study of the 
most important principles and forms of war.$2.50 

*THE PRINCIPLES OF WAR. Historically Illustrated. By 
Major General E. A. Altham, British Army. (425 pages, with 
a Volume of maps) (1914) Deals with factors of success in 
war ; organization ; characteristics of Infantry, Cavalry, and 
other arms; means of communication ; intercommunication and 
orders; movements by land and sea; billets and bivouacs. A 
standard. 

CAVALRY 

(Recommended by Chief of Cavalry) 

* ACHIEVEMENTS OF CAVALRY. By General Sir Evelyn 
Wood, British Army. (260 pages) (1897) Twelve accounts of 
brilliant Cavalry actions. Written by a veteran Cavalryman 
for his younger comrades who wanted the lessons of Cavalry 
work in a short and easily-read form.$0.94, plus duty. 

A HISTORY OF CAVALRY. By Colonel G. T. Denison, 
Canadian Army. (468 pages, illustrated index) (1913) The only 
complete history of Cavalry ever written. Describes origin, 
development of organization, equipment, armament, armor, 
evolutions. Analyzes all battles where Cavalry played a part. 
American Civil War fully covered. This book cannot be dis¬ 
placed by anything now available. $4.20 

AS TO POLO. By W. Cameron Forbes. 5th Edition. 25 
diagrams of plays in colors. (154 pages) (1923) A standard 
book on the American game. $3.00 

CAVALRY IN FUTURE WARS. By General von Bernhardi, 
German Army. (305 pages) (1909) Written by a soldier 
imbued with the dash and fire of Cavalry spirit. Reveals 
profound insight into conditions of modern war and proper use 
of Cavalry. An excellent book. $5.00 

*CAVALRY IN WAR AND PEACE. By General von Bernhardi, 
German Army. (368 pages) (1910) Role, tactics, training, 
and organization of Cavalry. Crystalizes much vague and 
abstract teaching into sound argument and clear lan¬ 
guage. $2.00, plus duty. 

CAVALRY TACTICS AS ILLUSTRATED BY THE WAR OF 
THE REBELLION. By Colonel Alonzo Gray, U. S. A., Retired. 
(187 pages) (1910) Accurate and authentic presentation of 
what the Cavalry actually did in the Civil War.$0.50 

EQUITATION. By H. L. de Bussigny. (370 pages) (1922) 
Many photographs and drawings. The perfectly trained horse, 
mounted by the perfectly trained rider, is the goal of this 
system of practical exercises, carefully illustrated and explained 
by one of the foremost horsemen riding masters in America, 
which enables any ordinary horseman to educate both himself 
and his mount simultaneously. A highly scientific course ex¬ 
plained in great detail. $7.50 

EXERCISES FOR SYSTEMATIC SCOUT INSTRUCTION. By 
Lieutenant Colonel Henry J. McKenny, U. S. Army. (146 
pages) (1916) This book is exactly what its title indicates. 
The many tasks which fall to the lot of the scout, the facts 
he seeks, the tasks and the methods he uses to find the facts, 
are all systematized in troop, squad and individual exercises. 


“A book may be as great a thing as a battle .”—Disraeli. 















7 

CAVALRY—CHEMICAL WARFARE—COAST AR¬ 
TILLERY 


System is the keynote of the book .and therein lies its value. 

It is a useful supplement to training regulations.$1.25 

HISTORY OF THE CAVALRY OF THE ARMY OF THE 
POTOMAC. By Colonel Charles D. Rhodes, U. S. Cavalry. (200 
pages) (1910) Title is self-descriptive. Excellent.$1.50 

THE DESERT MOUNTED CORPS. By Colonel R. M. P. 
Preston, British Army. (356 pages, maps, index, illust.) (1922) 
The story of how the British Troops—composed principally of 
mounted units—overcame the Turks in Palestine, thus break¬ 
ing the rear of the Central Powers and contributing directly 
and substantially to their defeat. Descriptions of many mounted 
actions, marches, reconnaissances, camps, transportation prob¬ 
lems, and supply difficulties. The best book on this part of 
the World War. $4.50 

THE GERMAN CAVALRY IN BELGIUM AND FRANCE, 1914. 

By Lt. General von Poseck. (239 pages, maps, index) (1923) 
The Inspector General of the German Army here gives the 
official story of the work of the German Cavalry at the begin¬ 
ning of the war as by eye witnesses, taking the Cavalry from 
their rendevous in Germany through 1914. Many stirring 
mounted combats. It is a vivid account of some of the things 

modern Cavalry can do and DID DO. $4.00 

_ 

CHEMICAL WARFARE 

(Recommended by Chief of Chemical Warfare) 

CHEMICAL WARFARE. By Fries and West. (445 pages) 
(1921) History and development of the use of chemical agents 
in battle. Probably the most complete work published on this 
subject. $3.50 

CREATIVE CHEMISTRY. By Edwin E. Slosson. (300 pages) 
(1919) A very interesting and instructive work on the various 
uses of chemical plant manufacturing products in peace and 
war.$3.00 . 

GAS WARFARE. By Edward S. Farrow. (253 pages) (1920) 

A general outline on the use of chemical agents in battle. $3.uv 

*THE RIDDLE OF THE RHINE. By Victor Lefebure. (279 
pages) (1921) The part played by the chemical industries of 
Germany in the last war. An interesting presentation of 
chemical strategy in peace and war. 

COAST ARTILLERY 

ANTI-AIRCRAFT DEFENSE. By officers of the 61st Anti¬ 
aircraft Battalion. (201 pages) (1923) Range-finding instru¬ 
ments, guns, drills and methods. $1.00 

GUNNERS’ INSTRUCTION. By officers of the Coast Artillery 
Corps. Fixed Gun, Fixed Mortar, Railway Gun, and Mine 

pamphlets. Each instruction is a pamphlet of about 100 pages, 
giving concise, elementary facts within its own scope. Supple¬ 
ments giving nomenclature and drill of particular sizes of 

guns or mortars are furnished free with instructions, where 
needed. Complete list follows: 

Gunners’ Instruction, Motorized Artillery, with 1 supple¬ 
ment. $0.50 

Supplements 

8-in. Howitzer. 155 mm. G. P. F. 

Gunners’ Instruction, Fixed Mortar (complete without 

supplement) . $0.50 

Gunners’ Instruction, Mine or Fixed Gun, with 1 supple¬ 
ment. $0.50 


Supplements 


3-in., 4-in., and 4.7-in. Rapid fire. 
5-in. and 6-in. Barbette. 

10-in. Barbette. 

12-in. Barbette, 1892 model. 

12-in. Barbette, 1917 model. 


Gunners’ 


Instruction, 


Railway, with 


6-in. Disappearing. 
8-in. Disappearing. 
10-in. Disappearing. 
12-in. Disappearing. 
14-in. Disappearing. 

1 supplement .... $0.50 


Supplements 

8-in., Rifle, railway. 12-in., Mortar, railway. 

Additional extra supplements for Gunners’ Instruction, 
each . 


$ 0.10 


“Book Service for the Army” is our motto. Let us serve you. 

















8 


COAST ARTILLERY—CUSTOMS SERVICE—ENGI¬ 
NEERING 


GUNNERY. By the Coast Artillery Board. (230 pages) (1922) 
Range and position finding, range correction, probability and 
adjustment of fire. ...Paper, $0.75; Cloth, $1.50 

HEAVY ARTILLERY MATERIEL. By the Coast Artillery 
Board. (635 pages) (1922) Definite, comprehensive informa¬ 
tion on all types of Heavy Artillery, pointing devices, fire 
control instruments, signal communications, and care and 
preservation of materiel.Paper, $2.00; Cloth, $3.00 

MECHANICAL MANEUVERS. By the Department of Artillery, 

Coast Artillery School. (42 pages) (1922) Covers construction 
and use of blocks and tackles, levers, pulleys, jacks, gin and 
shears, together with a course on cordage, knots and 
splices. $0.20 

MILITARY MOTOR TRANSPORTATION. By Majors Richard 
Donovan and George F. Moore, C. A. C. (414 pages) (1923) 
Latest authoritative information on every type of motor vehicle 
used by the Service.Boards, $1.25; Cloth, $2.25 

THE HEAVY (COAST) ARTILLERYMEN’S FIELD POCKET- 
BOOK. By the Coast Artillery School. (206 pages) (Up-to- 
date) A set of up-to-date loose leaves intended for the use 
of students at the School but of great value to all Coast Ar¬ 
tillery officers. Contains logarithmic tables, circular functions 
in degrees, mils and grades, natural functions, solar and lunar 
directions calculations and ephemeris, solution of three-point 
problems, etc. Bindings and prices as follows: 


Sheets without cover .-. $1.50 

with Duplex Leather Cover, ^-in. ri:>js . 6.50 

with Duplex Canvas Cover, fi-in. rings . 3.50 

with Single Leather Cover . 4.35 

with Single Fabrikoid Cover .. 3.15 

with Single Canvas Cover . 2.85 

with Duplex Leather Cover, in. rings . 7.00 


CUSTOMS OF THE SERVICE 

OFFICERS’ MANUAL. By Colonel Jas. A. Moss. (See page 4) 

ENGINEERING 

(Recommended by Chief of Engineers) 

CIVIL ENGINEER’S POCKET-BOOK. By Trautwine. (20th 

Edition; 2nd issue.) (1600 pages) (1922) . $6.00 

CONCRETE ENGINEERS’ HANDBOOK. By Hool and John¬ 
son. (800 pages) (1918) Data for the design and construction 
of plain and reinforced concrete structures.$6.00 

DREDGES AND DREDGING. By Prelini. (279 pages) (1912) 
Description of dredges and dredging, operation and cost. 2nd 
Edition. $3.00 

DREDGING ENGINEERING. By F. Lester Simon. (182 pages) 
(1920) Description of dredges and dredging, operation and 
costs. $2.50 

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS’ POCKET BOOK. By Foster. (1599 
pages) (1913) A handbook of useful data for electricians and 
electrical engineers. 7th Edition. $5.00 

HANDBOOK FOR ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS. By Pender. 

(2263 pages) (1922) A reference book for practicing engineers 
and students of engineering — Leather binding, $7.00; “Atho- 
leather” binding . $6.00 

HIGHWAY ENGINEERS’ HANDBOOK. By Harger and Bonney. 
(700 pages) (1919) Containing information ordinarily used in 
the design and construction of roads warranting an expenditure 
of $5,000 to $30,000 per mile. $5.00 

MARINE ENGINEERS’ HANDBOOK. By Sterling. (1450 pages) 
(1920) Prepared by a staff of specialists. $7.00 

MECHANICAL ENGINEERS’ HANDBOOK. By Marks. (1800 
pages) (1916) . $6.00 


U A library is not a luxury , but one of the necessities of life.” 
—Beecher. 


























9 


ENGINEERING—FIELD ARTILLERY—FINANCE 


RIVER AND HARBOR CONSTRUCTION. By Townsend. (189 
pages) (1922) The hydraulic principles governing river and 
harbor construction. .'. $2.60 

STRUCTURAL ENGINEERS’ HANDBOOK. By Ketchum. (896 
pages) (1918) Data for the design and construction of steel 
bridges and buildings. 2nd Edition. $6.00 

THE ARCHITECTS’ AND BUILDERS’ POCKET-BOOK. By 
Kidder. (1907 pages) (1921) A handbook for architects, 
structural engineers, builders and draftsmen.$7.00 

THE BUILDING ESTIMATOR’S REFERENCE BOOK. By 
Walker. (1600 pages) (1924) A practical and thoroughly 
reliable reference book for contractors and estimators engaged 
in estimating the cost and constructing all classes of modern 
buildings ; giving the actual labor costs and methods employed 
in the erection of some of our present day structures, together 
with all necessary material prices and labor quantities entering 
into the cost of all classes of buildings. (Temporarily out of 
print; 5th Edition will be ready in April, 1924.) . $10.00 

THEORY AND PRACTICE OF SURVEYING. By Johnson and 
Smith. (921 pages) (1910) Designed for the use of sur¬ 
veyors and engineers but especially for the use of students 
in engineering. $4.00 

WATERWORKS HANDBOOK. By Flinn, Weston and Bogart. 
(824 pages) (1918) A handbook covering the sources, collection, 
transportation, delivery, distribution, character and treatment 

of water. $6.00 

PUBLIC WATER SUPPLY. By Turneaure and Russell. (808 
pages) (1908) Requirements, resources, and the construction 
of work, with a chapter on pumping machinery by D. W. 
Mead. $6.00 


FIELD ARTILLERY, 

(Recommended by Chief of Field Artillery) 

FIRE CONTROL INSTRUMENTS. (Field Artillery School.) 
(35 pages) (1923) Containing a brief description of Field Ar¬ 
tillery fire control instruments and the use of such instruments 
in the field.•*. $0.25 

^LETTERS ON ARTILLERY. By Hohenlohe. (442 pages) 
(1898) A classic work. So far as relates to tactics, the book, 
written shortly after the war of 1870, is entirely out of date, 
but as illustrating the morale and spirit which should animate 
a Field Artillery officer there is probably no better book. $2.50, 
plus duty. 

MILITARY MOTOR TRANSPORTATION. By Donovan Moore. 
(See page 8) 

TACTICS AND TECHNIQUE OF ARTILLERY. (2 Volumes. 
General Service Schools.) (367+277 pages) (1922) An excellent 
work presenting in condensed form the latest views on Artillery 
and its tactical use.Per volume, $1.50 

THE GERMAN OFFENSIVE OF JULY, 1918. General Service 
Schools. (910 pages) (1923) A collection of documents, French, 
German and American, including the Field Artillery orders for 
the preparation, attack and defense of the Marne. Probably the 
first set of documents giving full description of Field Artillery 
tactics for both sides of a great modern battle. $3.00 

TOPOGRAPHY FOR FIELD ARTILLERY. (Field Artillery 
School) (241 pages) (1922) A valuable study on the subject 
of Orientation applied to Field Artillery. $1.00 

NOTES ON FIELD ARTILLERY. By Colonel Oliver L. Spauld¬ 
ing, Jr. (244 pages) (1918) Gives new officers of. Artillery 
and other arms an insight into the powers, limitations, and 
methods of Field Artillery. Most of the material described is 
still in use, while the methods, although modified since the 
War, are still sound. An excellent book for the ground it 
covers. $2.00 


FINANCE 


(Recommended by Chief of Finance) 


AMERICAN BUSINESS LAW. By John J. Sullivan. (424 
pages) (1920) A text book for students and a book of reference 
upon the practical legal questions that are likely to perplex 
the business man. 3rd Edition. $2.50 


Any book, in any language, in any land—we can get it for you. 






















10 


FINANCE—FORTIFICATION—HISTORY: INDE X— 
WORLD 


BOOKKEEPING AND ACCOUNTING. By Joseph J. Klein. 
(449 pages) (1917) Written with the purpose of imparting 
the principles of bookkeeping in all its necessary comprehensive¬ 
ness in a much shorter time than is the general rule. .. $2.50 

MANUAL OF COMMERCIAL LAW. By Edw. W. Spencer. (639 

pages) (1898) A guide upon the laws of business for the 

business man. $3.50 

MONEY AND BANKING. By John Thom Holdsworth. (557 
pages) (1923) Presents the essentials of the history, theory 
and principles of money and the principles and practices of 
banking. 3rd Edition. $3.00 

THE BANKER’S CREDIT MANUAL. By Alexander Wall. (247 
pages) (1919) A complete survey of the credit department, 

its obligations and its opportunities. How to systematize work, 
stabilize operations and facilitate investigations. (Temporarily 
out of print. New edition will be available about June, 

1924.) . $4.00 


FORTIFICATION 

FIELD FORTIFICATIONS., (Fort Leavenworth General Service 
Schools.) (209 pages) (1922) .:.Paper, $0.50 


HISTORY 


INDEX 


Page 

General History of the World. 10 

General History of the United States: 

(a) From discovery to 1914. 11 

(b) By Periods: 

(1) Colonial Period . 11 

(2) Revolutionary Period . 11 

Military History: 

(a) General . 12 

(b) By wars: 

(1) American wars (except World War): 

Colonial . 12 

Revolutionary War . 12 

War of 1812. .. 12 

Mexican War . 12 

Civil War . 12 

Spanish-American War . 14 

Philippine Insurrection . 14 

Boxer Rebellion, 1900. 14 

(2) Wars other than American: 

Early Wars . 14 

Marlborough’s Campaigns (1702-1711)... 14 

Seven Years’ War (1756-1763). 14 

Napoleonic Wars (1793-1815). 14 

Crimean War (1854-1856). 15 

Austro-Prussian War (Seven Weeks’ War) 

(1866) . 15 

Franco-German War (1870). 15 

Russo-Turkish War (1877). 15 

Sudan (Kartoum) (1855-1898). 15 

Chinese-Japanese War (1894-1895). 15 

Boer War (1899-1901). 15 

Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905). 15 

(3) World War: 

General . 16 

Precedents to the War. 17 

Consequences of the War. 17 

Economics of the War. 18 

Western Theatre . 18 

Eastern Theatre . 18 

Southern Theatre (Italy, Greece, The 

Balkans) . 18 

Southeastern Theatre (Palestine, Meso¬ 
potamia, Persia and Arabia). 19 

East and Southwest Africa. 19 

Naval operations . 19 


GENERAL HISTORY OF THE WORLD 

A SHORT HISTORY OF THE WORLD. By H. G. Wells. (455 
pages) (1922) A most general account, vivid, clear and fasci¬ 
nating, of our present knowledge of history, shorn of 
elaborations and complications. Written especially for the 
general reader, too driven to study in detail the maps and 
time charts of the author’s The Outline of History.$4.00 


“A little library, growing each year, is an honorable part of 
a man’s history.” — Beecher. 













































11 


HISTORY: WORLD—UNITED STATES 


THE OUTLINE OF HISTORY. By H. G. Wells. (1171 pages) 
1921—Third Edition, Revised and Rearranged) An absorbingly 
interesting story of life and mankind so far as known today, 
presented in a plain and clear narrative manner that holds 
the interest of the general reader. $5.00 

THE STORY OF MANKIND (Profusely illustrated.) By 
Hendrick Van Loon. (489 pagt/ ) (1921) A simple, instructive, 
fascinating story. While written primarily for young folks, 
it is equally fascinating to adults. $5.00 

GENERAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES 

(One of our greatest American generals when asked by a 
junior officer, “General, what would be your advice to a young 
ambitious officer who wants to succeed in the Army?”, replied, 

“I would advise him to study and know the history of his 
Country.” Another well-known general recently said: “The 
proper foundation of the education of an officer is a thorough 
knowledge of the history of his own Country.”) 

(a) From Discovery to 1914 

THE RIVERSIDE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES. By 

Carl Becker, Allen Johnson, William E. Dodd, and Frederic L. 
Paxson. (4 Vols.—279+346+329+342 pages) (1915) These 
four small volumes, each dealing with a special period, by 
authors who are professors in Cornell, Yale, Chicago, and Wis¬ 
consin Universities, are exceedingly well written, in parts even 
brilliant. The last volume runs to 1914.Set $10.00 

THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE UNITED STATES FROM 
COLONIES TO A WORLD POWER. By Max Farrand. (356 
pages) (1918) . $2.00 

THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. By John Fiske.* (2 Vols.— 
1147 pages) (1892) With an account of Ancient America and 
the Spanish Conquest. In the opinion of many, the best history 
of that period. $5.00 


(b) By Periods 

(1) Colonial Period 

THE BEGINNINGS OF NEW ENGLAND. By John Fiske. 
(296 pages) (1889) Shows in a striking and convincing man¬ 
ner that New England’s history was the birth of centuries of 
travail. So fascinating that it can be read several times. $2.50 

NEW FRANCE AND NEW ENGLAND. By John Fiske. (378 
pages) (1902) A broad and philosophic presentation of the 
cause and events which marked the victory on this continent of 
the English civilization over the French. $2.50 

THE DUTCH AND QUAKER COLONIES IN AMERICA. By 

John Fiske. (2 Vols.—294+386 pages) (1889) _ A masterful 
story of the founding and growth of colonies in New York 
and Pennsylvania.Set, $5.00 


(2) Revolutionary Period 

THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. By John Fiske. (2 Vols.— 
649 pages) (1891) A vivid presentation of the subject. Set $5.00 

THE WAR OF INDEPENDENCE. By John Fiske. (193 pages) 
(1889) Intended primarily for young people, but recommended 
by us to everyone. A brilliant and effective story. $1.25 

THE CRITICAL PERIOD OF AMERICAN HISTORY, 1783-1789. 

By John Fiske. (368 pages) (1888) A fascinating account of 
the period between the Revolution and the adoption of the 
Constitution. $2.50 

LOSSING’S FIELD BOOK OF THE REVOLUTION. (A Pic¬ 
torial History.) By Benson J. Lossing. (2 Vols.—783+772 
pages) (1900) Excellent. $10.00 


* John Fiske was the master of a captivating style and a 
great expert in historical philosophy. All of his books on 
American history are fascinating in style and accurate in fact. 
Students of history consider him one of our best authorities on 
American history. 


Write for our special catalogue of “Magazine Bargains 

















HISTORY, MILITARY: GENERAL — AMERICAN 

WARS 


MILITARY HISTORY 

(a) By Wars 

THE FIFTEEN DECISIVE BATTLES OF THE WORLD 
(FROM MARATHON TO WATERLOO). By Sir Edward Creasy. 
(560 pages) (1918) A well-known work. Interesting and 
instructive.;. $1.75 

THE DECISIVE BATTLES OF MODERN TIMES. By Lieut. 

Colonel F. E. Whitton, C. M. G. (259 pages) (1923) Well 
balanced and intensely interesting. $3.50 

AMERICAN CAMPAIGNS. By Major Matthew F. Steele, U. S. 
A. (2 Vols.—-732 pages; 311 pages maps) (1922) A com¬ 
prehensive narrative of all our principal campaigns from the 
Colonial Wars to the Spanish-American War, inclusive. Offi¬ 
cially adopted by the War Department. $10.00 

THE MILITARY UNPREPAREDNESS OF THE UNITED 

STATES. By Frederick L. Huidekoper. (719 pages) (1915) An 
unvarnished, truthful military history of the United States, 
setting forth the facts concerning the military policy of the 
United States since Revolutionary times. Based to considerable 
extent on Upton’s Military Policy of the United States. An 
admirable work. $6.00 

AMERICA’S DUTY (Formerly entitled OUR MILITARY HIS¬ 
TORY: Its Facts and Fallacies). By General Leonard Wood. 
(252 pages) (1921) A brief review of our past military policy, 
its shortcomings and cost. Excellent. $1.25 

(a) By Wars 

(1) American Wars 

Colonial 

[Covered in Steele’s “American Campaigns,” described under 
“(a) General,” above.] 

Revolutionary War 

[See, “(2) Revolutionary Period,” under “General History of 
the United States,” page 11.] 

War of 1812 

FIELD BOOK OF THE WAR OF 1812. (A Pictorial History) 

By Benson J. Lossing. (1084 pages) (1915) Excellent. Con¬ 
sulted by officers at the Army War College more than any 
other book on the subject. $5.00 

SEA POWER IN ITS RELATIONS TO THE WAR OF 1812. 

By Captain A. R. Mahan, U. S. N. (2 Vols.—900 pages) 
(1905) Excellent. $12.00 

THE INVASION OF THE CITY OF WASHINGTON. By John 

M. Stahl. (260 pages) (1918) A disagreeable study in and 
of military unpreparedness.... $1.25 

THE DIPLOMACY OF THE WAR OF 1812. By Frank A. 

Updyke. (494 pages) (1915) Very good. $2.75 

Mexican War 

THE WAR WITH MEXICO. By Justin H. Smith. (2 Vols.— 
572+620 pages) (1919) Complete and accurate. The best book 
published on the Mexican War. $10.00 

Civil War 

CAMPAIGNS OF THE CIVIL WAR (13 volumes) (Volume IV 
out of print.) Written by a number of leading actors in, and 
students of, the War. Gives an authoritative, trustworthy 
general military history of the great conflict: 

Volume I. THE OUTBREAK OF THE REBELLION. By John 

G. Nicalay, Private Secretary to President Lincoln. (226 pages) 
(1905) Describes opening of the war, and covers the period 
from the election of Lincoln to the end of the first Battle of 
Bull Run. $1.50 

Volume II. FROM FORT HENRY TO CORINTH. By Brigadier 

General M. F. Force. (204 pages) (1908) Narrative of events 
in the West from the summer of 1861 to May, 1862, covering 
the capture of Forts Henry and Donelson, the Battle of Shiloh, 

etc . $1.50 

Volume III. THE PENINSULA. By Major General Alexander 

S. Webb. (219 pages) (1905) History of McClellan's Peninsula 

Campaign, from his appointment to the end of the Seven Days’ 
Fl S h t. SI.50 


“It is a man’s duty to have books.”— Beecher. 
























13 


HISTORY, MILITARY: AMERICAN WARS 


Volume IV. Out of print. 

Volume V. ANTIETAM AND FREDERICKSBURG. By Colonel 
Francis W. Palerey. (228 pages) (1906) From the appoint¬ 
ment of McClellan to the general command, September, 1862, 
to the end of the Battle of Fredericksburg. $1.50 

Volume VI. CHANCELLORSVILLE AND GETTYSBURG. By 

Major General Abner Doubleday. (243 pages) (1908) From 
the appointment of Hooker, through the campaigns of Chan- 
cellorsville and Gettysburg, to the retreat of Lee after the 
latter battle. $1.50 

Volume VII. THE ARMY OF THE CUMBERLAND. By 

Brigadier General Henry M. Cist. (289 pages) (1903) From 
the formation of the Army of the Cumberland to the end of 
the battles at Chattanooga, November, 1863. $1.50 

Volume VIII. THE MISSISSIPPI. By Major General Francis 

V. Greene. (276 pages) (1909) Account of the operations— 

especially at Vieksburg and Port Hudson—by which the Missis¬ 
sippi River and its shores were restored to the control of the 
Union. $1.50 

Volume IX. THE CAMPAIGN OF ATLANTA. By Major 
General Jacob D. Cox. (274 pages) (1903) From Sherman’s 
first advance into Georgia in May, 1864, to the beginning of 
the March to the Sea. $1.50 

Volume X. THE MARCH TO THE SEA—FRANKLIN AND 
NASHVILLE. By Major General Jacob D. Cox. (276 pages) 
(1913) From the beginning of the March to the Sea to the 
surrender of Johnston—including also the operations of Thomas 
in Tennessee. $1.50 

Volume XI. THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY IN 1864. By 

George E. Pond. (287 pages) (1913). $1.50 

Volume XII. THE VIRGINIA CAMPAIGN OF '64 AND '65; 
THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC AND THE ARMY OF THE 
JAMES. By Brigadier General Andrew A. Humphreys. (451 
pages) (1916) Includes surrender of Lee at Appomattox and of 
all other Confederate armies. $1.50 

Volume XIII. STATISTICAL RECORD. By Captain Frederick 
Phisterer. (343 pages) (1907). $1.50 

A BIRD’S EYE VIEW OF THE CIVIL WAR. By Colonel 
Theodore A. Dodge. (327 pages) (1897) A clear and vivid 
outline of the war, giving the reader an intelligent general 
knowledge of the conflict. $2.00 

MILITARY MEMOIRS OF A CONFEDERATE. By Brigadier 
General E. P. Alexander. (634 pages) (1918) A searching 
and fearless analysis of each of the great campaigns. One 
of the ablest and most valuable books on the Civil War.... $5.00 

STORY OF THE CIVIL WAR. By John C. Ropes and Colonel 

W. R. Livermore. (Originally a 4 volume set. Vol. II now 
out of print. Each part complete in itself and sold separately.) 

PART I. By John C. Ropes. (274 pages) (1894) Narrative 
of events to the opening of the campaigns of 1862. (1 

Vol.) . $2.50 

PART II. THE CAMPAIGNS OF 1862. By John C. Ropes. 
(475 pages) (1907) (1 Vol.) (Out of print.) 

PART III. THE CAMPAIGNS OF 1863 TO JULY 10TH. 

(Together with Operations on the Mississippi from April, 
1862.) By Colonel William R. Livermore. (2 Vols. as follows:) 

BOOK I. (270 pages) (1913) Operations against Vicks¬ 
burg, etc. $2.50 

BOOK II. (251 pages) (1913) Chancellorsville, Vicksburg, 
Port Hudson, Tullahoma, and Gettysburg... $2.50 

PERSONAL MEMOIRS OF U. S. GRANT. (2 Vols.—525+460 
pages) (1895) An exceptionally able and careful work that 
should be in every officer’s library. $10.00 

THE LIFE AND PERSONALITY OF JEFFERSON DAVIS. 

By General Morris Schaff. (277 pages) (1922) An interesting 

biography. . . $3.00 

THE SUNSET OF THE CONFEDERACY. By General Morris 
Schaff. (302 pages and maps) (1912) An exhaustive and 
graphic narrative of the fall of Petersburg, the evacuation of 
Richmond and the closing scenes at Appomatttox. $3.00 


Save time, trouble and money by making us your “Book Broker ” 






















14 


HISTORY, MILITARY: AMERICAN AND OTHER 
WARS 


Spanish-American War 

THE CAMPAIGN OF SANTIAGO de CUBA. By Colonel Her¬ 
bert H. Sargent. (3 Vols.—274+236+268 pages) (1907) The 
best and most complete book published on the subject. $5.00 

Philippine Insurrection 

THE AMERICAN OCCUPATION OF THE PHILIPPINES, 
1898-1912. By James H. Blount. (652 pages) (1912) (Consid¬ 
ered the best book on the subject, but is now out of print. 
Can usually be borrowed from libraries.) 

Boxer Rebellion , 1900 

AMERICA IN THE CHINA RELIEF EXPEDITION. By 

Brigadier General A. S. Daggett. (267 pages) (1903) An 
interesting narrative... $2.50 


World War 
(See page 16.) 

(2) Wars Other Than American 

Early Wars 

(See “Hannibal,” “Alexander,” “Gustavus Adolphus,” “Caesar,” 
and “Great Captains,” under “Art of War,” page 5.) 

Marlborough’s Campaigns (1702-1 111) 

*THE WARS OF MARLBOROUGH. By Frank Taylor. (2 

Vols.—465+513 pages) (1921) The best and most complete 
work on Marlborough campaigns.$13.39, plus duty 

MARLBOROUGH CAMPAIGNS. By Captain F. W. O. May- 
cock, British Army. (203 pages) (1913) A brief and concise 
account. $3.00 

MARLBOROUGH (and The Rise of the British Army). By 
C. T. Atkinson. (560 pages) (1921) An interesting story of 
the life and campaigns of the Duke of Marlborough. Prob¬ 
ably the most complete and accurate book ever published on 
the life of Marlborough. $4.50 

Seven Years’ War (1756-1763) 

FREDERICK THE GREAT AND THE SEVEN YEARS’ WAR. 
By F. W. Longman. (252 pages) (1917) Elementary, brief 
and condensed, but gives good outline of Frederick the Great 
and the time in which he lived. $1.25 

ENGLAND IN THE SEVEN YEARS’ WAR. By Julian S. 

Corbett. (880 pages) (1907) Excellent. $7.00 

Napoleonic Wars ( 1793-1815 ) 

The following three books are generally considered standards: 

(1) THE LIFE OF NAPOLEON. By John H. Rose. (Revised 

Edition, 1000 pages) (1924). $7.50 

(2) NAPOLEON I. By August Fourmer. (836 pages) 

(1903) $2.50 

(3) THE FIRST NAPOLEON. By John C. Ropes. (347 pages) 

(1885) $3.00 

LIFE OF NAPOLEON. By Baron Jomini. (2 Vols.—645+600 
pages; atlas of 60 maps) (1897) Generally considered the best 
military history of Napoleon and his campaigns . $12.00 

NAPOLEON: (A Short Biography). By R. M. Johnston. (248 
pages) (1904) Excellent. $2.00 

THE CAMPAIGN OF WATERLOO. By John C. Ropes. (402 
pages) (1916) Considered by some as the best book ever 
written on the subject. $3.00 

THE CAMPAIGN OF MARENGO. By Colonel Herbert H. 

Sargent, U. S. A. (240 pages) (1918) Excellent. $2.00 

*NAPOLEON AND THE CAMPAIGN OF 1814. By Henry 

Houssaye. (514 pages) (1914) Excellent.$2.28, plus duty 

NAPIER’S PENINSULA WAR (1807-1814). By Major General 
Napier, British Army. (3 Vols.—1800 pages) (1904) Con¬ 
sidered by some as the best military history ever written. $6.00 
*NAPOLEON AS A GENERAL. By Count Yorck von Warten- 
burg. (2 Vols.—381+486 pages) (1902) A valuable military 
estimate of Napoleon.$7.92, plus duty. 


“Books are not made for furniture, but there is nothing that 
so beautifully furnishes a house.” —Beecher. 





























HISTORY, MILITARY: WARS OTHER THAN AMER¬ 
ICAN 


15 


THE JENA CAMPAIGN. By Colonel F. N. Maude, British 
Army. (202 pages) (1909). $3.00 

MEMORIS OF BARON de MARBOT. (695 pages) (1913) An 
extremely interesting work which throws much light on the 
military methods and life in the armies of Napoleon $4.00 

*JENA TO EYLAN. By General von der Goltz. (354 pages) 
(1913) Excellent. $1.98, plus duty. 

NAPOLEON. By Colonel Theodore A. Dodge, U. S. A. (4 Yols.) 
(See page 5.) 

Crimean War ( 185U-1856) 

■THE WAR IN THE CRIMEA. By General Sir Edward Ham- 
ley. (307 pages) (1890) Excellent. 

Austro-Prussian War (Seven Weeks’ War) ( 1S66) 

*THE SEVEN WEEKS’ WAR. By Colonel Sir H. M. Hozier, 
British Army. (523 pages) (1907) Excellent. 

THE CAMPAIGN OF KONIGGRATZ. By Colonel Arthur L. 
Wagner, U. S. A. (200 pages) (1899) A study of the Austro- 
Prussian conflict in the light of the American Civil War. A 
standard . $2.50 


The Franco-Germ,an War (1870) 

*THE FRANCO-GERMAN WAR. Edited by Major General J. 
F. Maurice, British Army. (By German officers; corresponds to 
our “Battles and Leaders of the Civil War.”) (650 pages) 
(1900) Very good. 

^HISTORY OF THE FRANCO-GERMAN WAR. By Colonel 
Adolph Borbstaedt, and Major Francis Dwyer. (701 pages) 
(1873) An excellent work, but it ends with the fall of Strass- 
burg and the annihilation of the French regular armies. 

The Russo-Turkish War (1877) 

THE RUSSO-TURKISH WAR. By Major Frederick Maurice, 
British Army. (294 pages) (1905) Very brief, dealing merely 
with the strategy and major tactics of the decisive portion of 
the campaign.. $3.00 

The Sudan ( 1885-1898 ) 

MODERN EGYPT. By Earl of Cromer. (1165 pages) (1908) 
Almost entirely devoted to the Sudan. Interesting and re¬ 
liable... $4.50 


The Chinese-Japanese War (1891^-1895) 

*AN EPITOME OF THE CHINO-JAPANESE WAR, 1894-95. 

By Captain N. W. H. Du Boulay. (78 pages) (1896) Com¬ 
piled in the Intelligence Division of the British War Office. 
Very good. 

^LETTERS ON AMPHIBIOUS WARS. By Brigadier General 
G. G. Aston. (372 pages) (1920) Contains an excellent chap¬ 
ter on the Chino-Japanese War, as well as other wars. $4.75, 

plus duty. 

*HEROIC JAPAN: A History of the War Between China and 
and Japan. By F. Warrington Eastlake and Yamada Yoshi-Aki. 
(556 pages) (1897) Gives Japanese viewpoint. 

The Boer War ( 1899-1901) 

THE SECOND BOER WAR. By Brigadier General John P. 
Wisser, U. S. A. (267 pages with Volume of maps) (1901) 
Very good. $2.50 

The Russo-Japanese War ( 190U-1905) 


A STAFF OFFICER’S SCRAP BOOK. By General Ian Hamil¬ 
ton. (443 pages) (1912) Contains valuable information for a 
study of the War. $2.75 

*PORT ARTHUR: The Siege and Capitulation. By Ellis A. 
Bartlett. (499 pages) (1906) The best English narrative of 
the siege. 

0 

*THE JAPANESE IN MANCHURIA. By E. L. V. Cordonnier. 
(2 Vols.—281+343 pages, with volume of maps) (1912-14) Ex¬ 
cellent.$4.41, plus duty. 


We render prompt and efficient service on all orders for books 
and periodicals. 























16 


HISTORY, MILITARY: WORLD WAR (GENERAL) 


(3) World War 

[See, “(3) World War,” under “History,” page 10.] 

General 

MILITARY HISTORY OF THE WORLD WAR. By Colonel 

Charles R. Howland. (Yol. I, 408 pages; Vol. II, 151 maps) 
(1923) A most carefully prepared, authoritative history of 
the war, consisting of lectures delivered at the Fort Leaven¬ 
worth General Service Schools. Shows military principles in¬ 
volved in the various campaigns—how their observance made 
toward victory and their non-observance toward defeat. While 
setting forth fairly the doings of all participants, it empha¬ 
sizes the important and critical part played by the United 
States. Considered one of the best works yet produced on the 
World War. Cloth binding, $3.00; half leather, $5.00; full 
leather, $7.50. 

A GUIDE TO THE MILITARY HISTORY OF THE WORLD 
WAR. By Captain Thomas G. Frothingham, Officers’ Reserve 
Corps. (386 pages) (1920) An interesting narrative giving a 
synopsis of the strategy and grand tactics of the war. Ex¬ 


cellent.. $2.75 

FOCH, THE WINNER OF THE WAR. By Raymond Recouly. 

(267 pages) (1920) .:. $3.00 

LITTLE HISTORY OF THE GREAT WAR. By H. Vast. (262 

pages) (1920) Very brief and general. $2.00 

DEDUCTIONS FROM THE WORLD WAR. By Lieutenant 

General Baron von Freytag-Loringhoven. (224 pages) 

(1918) $1.25 


*OUT OF MY LIFE. By Marshall von Hindenburg. (470 pages) 
(1920) Interesting and illuminating memoirs. $12.60, including 
duty. 

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE GREAT WAR. By Carlton J. H. 

Hayes. (461 pages) (1923). $2.75 

LUDENDORFF’S OWN STORY. By General von Ludendorff. 

(2 Vols.—477+473 pages) (1919) . $7.50 

THE GERMAN GENERAL STAFF. By General von Falken- 
hayn. (332 pages) (1920) . $5.00 

■^REFLECTIONS ON THE WORLD WAR. By von Bethmann 

Hollweg. (171 pages) (1920) 

AMERICA IN FRANCE. By Frederick Palmer. (446 pages) 

(1918) An interesting account. $2.50 

BATTLEFIELDS OF THE WORLD WAR. By Johnson. See 
page 23.) 

"■THE GENERAL STAFF AND ITS PROBLEMS. By General 

von Ludendorff. (2 Vols.—370+721 pages) (1920) 

THE LITERARY DIGEST HISTORY OF THE WORLD WAR. 
Compiled by Francis W. Halsey. (10 Vols.—376+376+400+370 
+392+407+392 +391+405 pages). (1920) An exhaustive work. 
Generously illustrated. Cloth, $25 a set; Half-leather, $35 a set. 
AMERICA IN THE WORLD WAR—A Romance in Figures. By 
Colonels P. S. Bond and C. O. Sherrill. (177 pages) (1921) A 
complete compendium of interesting and illuminating statistical 
information about all features of the World War, with striking 
diagrams, including a brief and snappy history of the War ; 
a description of all weapons used and how employed; a bird’s- 
eye view of how a great modern battle is fought; a chronology 
of all important events; and many other interesting fea¬ 
tures. $1.50 

A HISTORY OF THE GREAT WAR. By John Buchan. (4 

Vols.—552+578+603+455 pages) (1922) Highly commended by 
Major General James G. Harbord, former Deputy Chief of 
Staff, U. S. Army. (Descriptive circular will be sent on re¬ 
quest.) . Set, $20.00 

HISTORY OF THE WORLD WAR. By Francis A. March. (800 
pages) (1919) $3.50 

MY FOUR YEARS IN GERMANY. By James W, Gerard, Late 
Ambassador to the German Imperial Court. (448 pages) 

(1917) ' . $2.00 

A SHORT HISTORY OF THE GREAT WAR. By William L. 

McPherson. (410 pages) (1920) Deals particularly with the 
military and diplomatic aspects and the part played in it by 
the United States. A good, concise outline study of the con¬ 
flict* . $2.50 

THE GREAT WAR. By George A. Allen. (5 Vols.—407+518 
+520+530+510 pages) (1915-1921) An elaborate work. 659 

illustrations.Set, $45.00 


“People should own and read books just as they should seek 
friendships . and try to understand their friends.” —Baijgs. 




















HISTORY, MILITARY: WORLD WAR (GENERAL- 
PRECEDENTS—CONSEQUENCES) 


17 


OUR WAR WITH GERMANY: A History. By John S. Bas¬ 
sett. (386 pages) (1919) Tells the story of our participation 
clearly and convincingly. Taken all together, it is one of the 
best one-volume stories yet written of our part in the 

war. $4.00 

A HISTORY OF THE GREAT WAR. By Arthur Conan Doyle. 
(6 Vols.—349—|—257—339-f-313 —|—355—(—325 pages) (1916—20) Covers 
the British Campaigns in France and Flanders from 1914 to 
1918. While of no special value to the military expert, it 
gives an interesting coherent account of the entire period of 
the war, and is written in easy, readable style. Each volume, 
$3.00; set, $18.00. 

MY THREE YEARS IN AMERICA. By Count Bernstorff. (428 
pages) (1920) . $5.00 

FACE TO FACE WITH KAISERISM. By James W. Gerard. 
(380 pages) (1918) . $2.00 

A REFERENCE HISTORY OF THE WAR. By Irwin S. Guern¬ 
sey. (388 pages) (1920) A competent history of the War. $6.00 

SIR DOUGLAS HAIG’S DESPATCHES. Edited by Lieutenant 
Colonel J. H. Boraston, British Army. (378 pages, and a 
volume of maps) (1919) An accurate and reliable account of 
military operations and also of the training and condition of 
the British troops from December, 1915, to April, 1919. Numer¬ 
ous sketch and folding maps objectify the military movements 
and supplement the text. $15.00 

THE WAR ROMANCE OF THE SALVATION ARMY. By 

Evangeline Booth and Grave Livingston Hill. (356 pages) 
(1919) A thrilling story showing us the American soldier in 
France as seen and heard by the Salvation Army. It’s a 
story that goes right to the heart, being full of human, 
sunshiny spirit. $1.75 

MY RHINELAND JOURNAL. By General Henry T. Allen. 
(593 pages) (1923) Daily diary. While intimate, it is of 
historical importance. Unusually interesting.$6.00 

Precedents to the War 

BEFORE THE WAR. By Viscount Haldane. (223 pages) 
(1920) Shows England’s diplomatic efforts to avoid war, to 
prepare for it, if it should come. Presents Germany’s attitude 
before the War. $2.50 

THE DIPLOMATIC BACKGROUND OF THE WAR (1870- 
1914). By Charles Seymour, Assistant Professor of History at 
Yale. (311 pages) (1916) Correlates in logical sequence the 
most significant events of European history during the last 45 
years and shows how the World War was the inevitable result 
of their reaction upon each other. $2.00 

PRESIDENT WILSON’S FOREIGN POLICY. Edited by J. B. 
Scott. (424 pages) (1918) A valuable collection of messages, 
addresses and papers upon which the United States may well 
rest its case.$3.50 

A SURVEY OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS BETWEEN 

THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY. By J. B. Scott, 
President of the American Institute of International Law. 
(1914-1917) (390 pages) (1917) This book should be used in 
connection with the preceding one. “President Wilson’s For¬ 
eign Policy.” . $ 5 * 00 

DIPLOMATIC DOCUMENTS RELATING TO THE OUTBREAK 

OF THE EUROPEAN WAR. By J. B. Scott. (2 Vols.—1393 
pages) (1923) Gives the official statements and explanations 
which the various nations, including Germany and Austria, 
have made as to the reasons which drove them to war, each 
apparently against its will. An interesting study of the 
psychology of nations. 

*THE HISTORY OF TWELVE DAYS (July 24 to August 4, 
1914). By J. W. Head lam. (404 pages) (1915) An interesting 
and illuminating account of the . negotiations preceding t e 
outbreak of war, based on the official publications. 

Consequences of the War 

WHAT REALLY HAPPENED AT PARIS. By Edward M. 
House and Charles Seymour. (528 pages) (1921). $4.50 

THE PEACE NEGOTIATIONS: A Personal Narrative. By 
Robert Lansing. (328 pages) (1921) . $3.00 


No order is too exacting for us to handle with promptness and 

satisfaction. 



















18 


HISTORY, MILITARY: WORLD WAR (CONSE¬ 
QUENCES—ECONOMICS—WESTERN — EASTERN — 
SOUTHERN) 


AT THE SUPREME WAR COUNCIL. By Peter E. Wright. 

(195 pages) (1921) . $2.50 

THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF THE PEACE. By 

John M. Keynes. (298 pages) (1920) An interesting 

study. $2.50 

Economics of War (With Emphasis on the World War) 

DIRECT AND INDIRECT COSTS OF THE WAR. By Ernest 

L. Bogart. (344 pages) (1919) . $1.00 

INDUSTRIAL AMERICA IN THE WORLD WAR. By Gros- 

venor B. Clarkson. (573 pages) (1923) A source of reference 
on the economic side of the World War, as well as a narra¬ 
tive classic of American business, drawn on a colossal 
scale. $6.00 

Western Theatre 

AMERICA IN BATTLE. By Colonel James A. Moss and Colonel 
Harry L. Howland. (615 pages) (1920) A graphic, dramatic 
description of the fighting of the American troops on the 
Western Front, describing vividly the part played by every 
Division..• t . $2.50 

CHATEAU-THIERRY: An American Shrine. (Profusely illus¬ 
trated with artistic pen sketches.) By Colonel James A. Moss 
and Colonel Harry L. Howland. (34 pages) (1920) This 

attractive brochure graphically describes the pilgrimage of an 
American pilgrim to the American shrine of Chateau- 
Thierry. $1.25 

THE MARCH ON PARIS AND THE BATTLE OF THE 

MARNE. By General von Kluck. (174 pages) (1923) 

Excellent. . $3.50 

BATTLE OF THE MARNE. By George H. Perris. (274 

pages) (1920) . $3.50 

GENERAL FOCH AT THE MARNE. By Charles Le Goffic. 
(219 pages) (1918) Readable, but of little technical 
value. $2.00 

THE BATTLE OF THE SOMME. By Philip Gibbs. (377 pages) 
(1917) Very good. $2.50 

THE STRATEGY OF THE WESTERN FRONT. By Colonel 
H. W. Sargent, U. S. A. (261 pages) (1920) Also deals with 
the strategy on other fronts and of the war in general. .. $2.50 

NINETEEN-FOURTEEN. By Field-Marshal Viscount French. 

(386 pages) (1919) . $6.00 

THE LAST FOUR MONTHS: How the War was Won. By 

Major General Sir Frederick B. Maurice. (245 pages) 

(1919) $2.50 

*THE FIRST SEVEN DIVISIONS. By Captain Ernest W. 
Hamilton. (324 pages) (1916) A good detailed account of the 
fighting from Mons to Ypres. 

THE WAY TO VICTORY. By Philip Gibbs. (2 Vols.—398+ 
278 pages) (1919) . $5.00 

OUR GREATEST BATTLE (The Meuse-Argonne). By Fred¬ 
erick Palmer. (617 pages) (1919) A comprehensive and in¬ 
telligent account, well told, of the greatest battle in which 
Americans ever fought, the Meuse-Argonne.$2.50 

THE TURN OF THE TIDE. By Jennings C. Wise. (253 pages) 
(1920) An interesting account of the American operations at 
Cantigny, Chateau-Thierry, and the Second Battle of the 
Marne. $1.50 

Eastern Theatre 

DAY BY DAY WITH THE RUSSIAN ARMY (1914-1915). By 

Bernard Pares. (287 pages) (1915) . $3.50 

WAR AND REVOLUTION IN RUSSIA (1914-1917). By B. 

Gourko. (420 pages) (1919) . $4.00 

WITH THE RUSSIAN ARMY (1914-1917). By Major General 
Sir Alfred Knox. (2 Vols.—1128 pages) (1921) . $15.00 

Southern Theatre (Italy, Greece, The Balkans) 

THE DARDANELLES. By Major General Sir C. E. Callwell. 
(361 pages) (1919) . $5.00 


“The true university of these days is a collection of books .”—• 
—Carlyle. 





























19 


HISTORY, MILITARY: WORLD WAR 
SOUTHEASTERN—AFRICA—NAVAL) 


(SOUTHERN— 

—HYGIENE 


THE STORY OF THE SALONICA ARMY. By G. W. Price. 
(311 pages) (1918) . $2 00 

FROM SERBIA TO JUGOSLAVIA (1914-1918).” By” Gordon- 
bmith. (366 pages) (1920) An interesting account of Serbia’s 
victories, reverses, and final triumph. $2.50 

££ LLIP0LI DIAR Y. By Sir Ian Hamilton. (2 Vols.—387+ 
S49 pages) (1920) Excellent. $10.00 


Southe astern Theatre (Palestine, Mesopotamia, Persia and 

Arabia) 

ALLENBY’S FINAL TRIUMPH. By W. T. Massey. (347 
pages) (1920) . $ 8>00 

*HOW JERUSALEM WAS WON. By W. T. Massey. (292 
pages) (1920). 


MY CAMPAIGN IN MESOPOTAMIA. By Major General Sir 
Charles V. F. Townshend. (2 Vols—377+343 pages) 
0920 ) . $ 10.00 

THE DESERT MOUNTED CORPS. By Colonel Richard M. P. 
Preston. (See page 7.) 

East and Southwest Africa 

*GENERAL SMUTS’ CAMPAIGN IN EAST AFRICA. By 
Brigadier General J. H. V. Crowe, British Army. (280 pages) 
(1918) An interesting and valuable account of the East 
African campaign. ..$2.77, plus duty. 

*WITH BOTHA AND SMUTS IN AFRICA. By Lieutenant 
Commander W. Whittall, R. N. Armoured Car Division. (280 
pages) (1917) A general narrative of the East African and 
the Southwest African campaigns.$2.40, including duty. 


Naval Operations 

(Recommended by Captain Dudley W t . Knox, United States 
Navy, Chief of Historical Section, Office of Naval In¬ 
telligence, Navy Department.) 

THE NAVAL HISTORY OF THE WORLD WAR. By Captain 
Thomas G. Frothingham, Officers’ Reserve Corps. (Due from 
the press early in 1924.) Compiled from data furnished by the 
Historical Section of the Navy Department, covers naval history 
of entire war in its broader aspects, showing incidentally 
the relations between naval strategy and land strategy. Excel¬ 
lent. (Price not yet known.) 

THE HISTORY OF THE TRANSPORT SERVICE, 1917-1919. 

By Vice-Admiral Albert Gleaves. (284 pages) (1921) A good 
and authoritative account, well illustrated, of operation of the 

American transport service. $6.00 

NAVAL OPERATIONS. By Sir Julian S. Corbett. An admir¬ 
able piece of work. Probably the best naval history of the 
War from the British viewpoint yet published. (3 Vols. and 
Maps:) 

Volume I. (To the Battle of the Falklands, Dec. 14, 

1914.) (488 pages, and a volume of maps) 

(1920) . $6.50 

Volume II. (To May, 1915, and deals mainly with the 
Dardanelles operations.) (488 pages, text and 
maps) (1921) $7.50 

Volume III. (Dardanelles campaign from May, 1915, to the 
final evacuation. Also concerns Mesopo¬ 
tamian and German submarine campaigns, 
and includes the Battle of Jutland.) (470 


pages) (1923) . $7.50 

Maps for Vol. Ill (1923). $7.50 


*MY MEMOIRS. By Grand Admiral von Tirpitz. (2 Vols.— 
586 pages) (1920) An excellent presentation of the German 
case, especially with reference to the broader motives under¬ 
lying German naval strategy and in the difficulties of coordina¬ 
tion among the higher naval commands. 

^GERMANY’S HIGH SEAS FLEET IN THE WORLD WAR. 
By Admiral Scheer. (390 pages) (1920) An excellent presenta¬ 
tion of German naval operations.$10.00, including duty. 

HYGIENE, SANITATION AND HEALTH 

(Recommended by the Surgeon General) 

THE ELEMENTS OF MILITARY HYGIENE. By Colonel P. 
M. Ashburn, Medical Corps, U. S. Army. (377 pages) j(1920) 
Standard. $2.50 


“Rook Service for the Army ” is our motto. Let us serve you. 

























20 


HYGIENE, SANITATION AND HEALTH—INFANTRY 


PRINCIPLES OF SANITARY TACTICS, THE By Colonel E. 

L. Munson. (305 pages) (1917) Gives a clear understanding 
of the military principles involved in the proper use of sani¬ 
tary service. Approved by the War Department.$2.15 

HYGIENE AND SANITATION. By Lieutenant Colonel R. H. 
Pierson. (271 pages) (1921) Used at the Infantry School. $0.90 

MEDICAL SERVICE IN MODERN WAR. By Lieut. Colonel 
P. S. Bond and C. F. Martin. (76 pages) (1920) An exposi¬ 
tion of the successful methods developed by the U. S. Army 
in the World War, both in open and stabilized warfare. .. $1.00 

HEALTH FOR THE SOLDIER AND SAILOR. By Irving 

Fisher and E. L. Fisk. (170 pages) (1918) Excellent.$0.60 

AMERICAN RED CROSS ABRIDGED TEXT BOOK ON FIRST 
AID. By Major Charles Lynch. (206 pages) (1918) 2d Edition. 
(Paper) Excellent. $0.40 

INFANTRY 

(Recommended by Office of Chief of Infantry) 

SMALL PROBLEMS FOR INFANTRY. By Colonel Alfred W. 
Bjornstad. (191 pages) (1918) An applicatory method for 
training junior officers and noncommissioned officers in the 
conduct of squads, platoons, patrols, outguards, etc. Paper, $0.75 

DEFENSE OF DUFFER’S DRIFT. By Gawne and Swinton. 
(168 pages) An interesting story of the Boer War that brings 
out and illustrates the principles of minor tactics . $1.50 

BATTLE OF BOOBY’S BLUFFS. By List. (138 pages) (1922) 

Companion book to the Defense of Duffer’s Drift. Deals with 
the operation of a battalion of Infantry in combat.$0.75 

TERRAIN EXERCISES. By Colonel William H. Waldron. 
(380 pages) (1923) Sets forth the up-to-date method of train¬ 
ing Infantry in minor tactics. $2.50 

In addition to the above books recommenaed by the Office 
of the Chief of Infantry: 

MANUAL OF MILITARY TRAINING. By Colonel Jas. A. 
Moss and Major John W. Lang. (2 Volumes: Volume I, 1066 
pages ; Volume II, 759 pages) (1923) A complete presentation 
of military training as manifested in the training and instruc¬ 
tion of a company. Generously illustrated. Takes the place 
of multiplicity of Infantry and other publications. Most suc¬ 
cessful military book ever published. More than 325,000 copies 
sold. Adopted as official textbook of more than one hundred 
military schools and colleges. Popularly known as “The Mili¬ 
tary Bible” and “The Encyclopedia of the Army.” New 
Infantry Training Regulations are included. Descriptive 
circular, with full table of contents, will be sent gratis on 
request. 

Volume I. Covers Basic R. O. T. C. Course, Red and White 
Courses, C. M. T. C., and additional material.$2.50 

Volume II. Covers Infantry Advanced Course, R. O. T. C., 
Blue Course, C. M. T. C., and additional matter.$2.50 

INFANTRY TRAINING REGULATIONS—Special Drill Edi¬ 
tion. By Colonel Jas. A. Moss and Major John W. Lang. 
(130 pages) (1924) Exact reproduction of Training Regula¬ 
tions 50-15, 50-20, 420-40, 420-45, 420-50, 420-60 and 420-85, 
with addition of annotations, illustrations, complete set of 
questions and thorough index. Supersedes Infantry Drill Regu¬ 
lations. $0.75 

INFANTRY SCHOOL PUBLICATIONS 

A complete price list of The Infantry School publications 
will be supplied on request. The following list includes only a 
few titles of general intei’est: 


Automatic Rifle, The. (99 pages) (1923) . .... $ .35 

Drill of the Howitzer Company.40 

Duties of the Machine Gun Personnel.15 

Instruments of the Howitzer Company .15 

Machine Guns in Attack . 15 

Machine Guns in Defense .20 

Mailing List (Annual subscription) . 1.50 

Manual for Hand Bombers and Rifle Grenadiers.25 

Mechanics of Light Mortar .20 

Mechanics of One Pounder.15 


“No amount of patriotic enthusiasm will compensate for a 
lack of military knowledge.” 























INFANTRY—LANGUAGES (ENGLISH) 


Musketry and Rifle Platoon Training (222 pages) 

(1921) . .75 

Preparation and Use of the Sand Table (53 pages) 

(1922) .75 

Scouting and Patrolling (214 pages) (1921) .75 

Tactical Problems .30 

Technique of Light Mortar ..20 

Technique of One Pounder .20 


LANGUAGES 

(a) English 

In Bulletin No. 5, A. G. O., March 31, 1923, the War De¬ 
partment invited the attention of the officers of the Army to 
the importance of using correct English in orders, and in letters 
and other correspondence, and deplored the fact that “a high 
standard of composition is rarely attained” in the Service. 
“These instructions,” the Bulletin stated, “are intended as a 
caution to individual officers to the end that each may dis¬ 
cover his own deficiencies in composition and, by taking cor¬ 
rective measures where necessary, help to raise the standard 
of the entire Army in this important respect.” 

It is astonishing the extent to which, by intelligent sys¬ 
tematic effort, improvement is possible in both the use of cor¬ 
rect English and in the acquirement of facility of expression 
in writing and in speaking. The following is suggested: 

First.—Create the “dictionary habit”—that is, get into 
the habit of looking up every word of whose mean¬ 
ing or spelling you are in doubt. 

Dictionaries Recommended 

(a) WEBSTER’S COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY. Third (Thin 
Paper) Edition of the Merriam Series. (1256 pages) (1923) 
An abridgment of Webster’s New International Dictionary. 
Of the several abridgements published, this is the most com¬ 
plete and comprehensive. While containing 1256 pages, with 
1700 illustrations, the thickness is only iy 2 inches and the 
weight only 2 x / 2 pounds. Not only is it compact and handy, 
but it responds to every reasonable demand made upon it. 
Art canvas binding, $5.00; Fabrikoid, $6.00; Full Leather, $7.50. 

(b) WEBSTER’S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY (2732 
pages) (1923) One of the best unabridged dictionaries ever 
printed. 6000 illustrations ; 407,000 vocabulary terms. (Keep 
it on a stand, conveniently located, so that the physical effort 
and amount of time used in looking up words will be re¬ 
duced to a minimum.) Buckram binding, $16.00; Sheep, $20.00. 

Second.—Study and use for purposes of reference the 
following books: 

THE WRITERS’ HANDBOOK: A GUIDE TO THE ART OF 
COMPOSITION. (148 pages) A general treatise on composi¬ 
tion and style, giving practical suggestions on how to write 
clearly, increase one’s vocabulary, and improve facility of 
expression. $3.00 

ENGLISH WORDS AND THEIR BACKGROUND. By George 
H. McKnight. (499 pages) (1923) An interesting study of the 
history and meaning of words. A big help in increasing one’s 
vocabulary.$2.50 

THE ENGLISH OF MILITARY COMMUNICATIONS.. By 

Major William A. Ganoe. (See page 4.) 

A DESK-BOOK OF ERRORS IN ENGLISH. By Frank H. 
Vizetelly. (232 pages) (1920) Aims to correct careless diction 
and point out common errors and vulgarisms. Arranged for 
instant consultation. $1.50 

CONNECTIVES OF ENGLISH SPEECH. By James C. Fernald. 
(324 pages) (1904) Gives definitions and correct usage of prepo¬ 
sitions, conjunctions, relative pronouns, and adverbs. .. .$1.90 

ENGLISH SYNONYMS, ANTONYMS AND PREPOSITIONS. 

By James C. Fernald, Contains over 8000 synonyms and 4000 
antonyms, and gives practical suggestions on the correct use 
of prepositions and the accurate use of words.$1.90 


Any book, in any language, in any land~we can get it for you. 




















22 


LANGUAGES (ENGLISH— SPANISH AND FRENCH) 
—LAW—LOGISTICS 


FIFTEEN THOUSAND USEFUL PHRASES. By Grenville 

Kleiser. (453 pages) (1922) Aims to impart dignity, power and 
grace of diction which is attainable otherwise only by long 
and arduous study and practice. $1.60 

EXPRESSIVE ENGLISH. By James C. Fernald. (463 pages) 
(1919) Gives a real understanding of vigorous, practical Eng¬ 
lish and shows how it can be used with the greatest beauty and 
effect . $1.90 

THE ART OF SPEAKING AND WRITING THE ENGLISH 
LANGUAGE. By Sherwin Cody. (6 Vols.—775 pages) (1903-5) 
A set of six handy manuals containing in concise and at¬ 
tractive form the essentials of good English. Vol. I. Word- 
study: Spelling, Letter-writing, etc., Vol. II. Dictionary of 
Errors: Errors of Grammar, Pronunciation, Style, etc. Vol. Ill 
Composition: Description, Dialogue, etc. Vol. IV. Story-writ¬ 
ing and Journalism: Business-letter Writing, Short Stories, 
Essays, Verse, etc. Vol. V. Grammar. Vol. VI. How to Read 
and What to Read. (Not sold separately.). $4.50 

PUTNAM’S CORRESPONDENCE HANDBOOK. By Eleanora 
Banks. 4th Edition. (259 pages) (1919) A work of reference 
designed to promote efficiency in business correspondence...$1.90 


GRENVILLE KLEISER’S CORRESPONDENCE COURSE 
IN GOOD ENGLISH. (An excellent course, in twenty lessons, 
highly recommended by some of our most prominent educators. 
Entire cost, $24, of which $4 is payable with order and $4 
monthly. Special descriptive circular will be sent on request.) 


(b) Spanish and French 

SPANISH FOR SOLDIERS. By Colonel Jas. A. Moss and 
Major John W. Lang. (449 pages; pocket size) (1916) In¬ 
tended to assist the beginner in acquiring in a short time a 
fair working knowledge of conversational military Spanish; 
also, a handy reference phrase book for officers and soldiers in 
campaign. . $1.00 


SPANISH IN TWENTY LESSONS. By R. D. de la Cortina. 
(338 pages) (1918) . $1.90 


FRENCH IN TWENTY LESSONS. By R. D. de la Cortina. 
(338 pages) (1918) . $1.90 


LAW 


ELEMENTS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW. By G. B. Davis. 
(4th Edition, 1916) (668 pages) A standard work. $3.50 


COURTS-MARTIAL PROCEDURE. (Compilation based on 
1920 Courts-Martial Manual.) (212 pages) (1921) Covers every 
detail of court-martial duty, from preparation of charges to 
conclusion of trial. $1.50 


RIOT DUTY. By Colonel Jas. A. Moss. (32 pages) (1917) 
Covers in nut-shell form both the legal and tactical sides of 
riot duty. $0.50 


THE GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 
IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. By T. M. Cooley. 
(423 pages) (1898) A standard work. $2.75 


LOGISTICS 

PURE LOGISTICS. By Lieutenant Colonel George C. Thorpe, 
U. S. Marine Corps. (138 pages) (1917) An excellent presenta¬ 
tion of the theory of logistics. $1.25 


“Show me a family of readers and I will show you the people 
who rule the world.” —Napoleon. 

















MACHINE GUNS—MAP READING AND MAKING- 
MILITARY GEOGRAPHY—MUSKETRY AND SMALL 
ARMS—NATIONAL GUARD—ORDNANCE 


23 


MACHINE GUNS 

EMPLOYMENT OF MACHINE GUNS. By Major Walter C. 
Short, Infantry, U. S. A. (222 pages) (1922) The first com¬ 
prehensive study of American Machine Gun tactics as developed 
in the World War, and the only text based on the present 


organization of our Army. $3.50 

MAP READING AND MAP MAKING 

MILITARY SKETCHING AND MAP READING. By Major 
Loren C. Grieves. (152 pages) (1921) . $1.50 

PRACTICAL MILITARY TOPOGRAPHY. By Colonel Jas. A. 
Moss and Major George R. Guild. (139 pages) (1920) .... $2.00 

MAP READING. (Infantry Association Edition) (40 pages) 
(1924) $0.60 


MILITARY GEOGRAPHY 

TOPOGRAPHY AND STRATEGY IN THE WAR. By Douglas 
Wilson Johnson. (211 pages) (1917) Shows how far modern 
military operations are affected by the terrain, emphasizing 
this interesting relationship between Nature and the science 
of war. Also, gives summary of chief military operations on 
the several fronts up to the time America entered the War. 
Excellent. $2.00 

BATTLEFIELDS OF THE WORLD WAR; A STUDY IN 
MILITARY GEOGRAPHY. By Douglas W. Johnson. (2 Vols. 
—648 pages and plates) (1921) Really a book on military 
geology, avoiding technicalities, but tracing the geology down 
through geography, and deducing the military conclusions; 
then testing and elaborating these conclusions by a short nar¬ 
rative of the operations of the World War, with frequent ex¬ 
cursions into those of Napoleon and even Attila and the 
Romans. Excellent. $7.00 

MUSKETRY AND SMALL ARMS 

THE AMERICAN RIFLE. By Major Townsend Whelen. (See 
under, “Ordnance,” below.) 

BATTLE FIRE TRAINING. By Turner and Fulmer. (295 


pages) (1917) An excellent work by two experts.$1.25 

SUGGESTIONS TO MILITARY RIFLEMEN. By Major Towns¬ 
end Whelen. Excellent. $1.50 


NATIONAL GUARD 

NATIONAL GUARD HANDBOOK FOR COMPANY COM¬ 
MANDERS. (425 pages) (1922) A compilation of Militia 
Bureau and other War Department regulations, orders and 
circulars affecting the National Guard; also, equipment and 
organization tables, “model” blanks, forms, and instructions 
for preparation of pay rolls, records, reports, returns, etcetera. 
Thoroughly indexed. $2.50 

HANDBOOK FOR THE NATIONAL GUARDSMAN IN RANKS. 

(379 pages) (1922) A compilation of all official text books, 
drill regulations and other publications needed for instruction 
in the basic subjects. Thoroughly indexed. $1.00 

ORDNANCE 

(Recommended by Chief of Ordnance) 

(a) Ordnance Engineering 

ORDNANCE AND GUNNERY. By Colonel W. H. Tschappat. 
(705 pages) (1917) A comprehensive volume covering explosives, 
ballistics, metals used in Ordnance construction, guns, recoil 
systems, artillery, projectiles, fire control instruments, small 
arms, etc. An excellent reference book. $7.00 

STRESSES IN WIRE-WRAPPED GUNS AND IN GUN CAR¬ 
RIAGES. By Brigadier General C. L’H. Ruggles. (259 pages) 
(1916) Explains and illustrates a number of the important 
engineering principles underlying the design of wire—wrapped 
guns artd of gun carriages. $3.50 

THE AMERICAN RIFLE. By Major Townsend Whelen. (637 
pages) (1918) A treatise, a text-book, and a book of practical 
instruction in the use of the rifle. Well illustrated, well 
written and interesting. $6.00 


Join “The Army Cooperative Book Club” and save money . 
See page 1. 

















24 


ORDNANCE—ORGANIZATION—PATRIOTISM 


(b) Chemistry and Explosives 

EXPLOSIVES. By Arthur Marshall. (2 Volumes—407+795 
pages) (1919) A comprehensive history and development of 
explosives down to the present time. Volume I deals with the 
early history and development of gun powder, discusses black 
powder, acids, nitric esters, smokeless powders, etc. Volume II 
deals with properties of explosives, special explosives, stability, 
etc. 2nd Revised Edition.. $22.00 

MILITARY EXPLOSIVES. By General Eramus M. Weaver. 
(382 pages) (1917) A resum§ of the principles, and a discussion 
of the manufacture, storage, tests, use, etc., of military ex¬ 
plosives. $3.75 


(c) Miscellaneous 

POST-WAR ORDNANCE. By Major LeRoy Hodges, O. R. C. 
(113 pages) (1923) Presents an excellent review of the progress 
made since the World War. .Cloth binding, $2.00; Paper, $1.50 

ORGANIZATION 

These works on organization were prepared at the Fort 
Leavenworth General Service Schools for the use of the student 
officers: 

MILITARY ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED STATES. 

(36 pages) (1922) .Paper, $0.15 

TABLES OF ORGANIZATION. (95 pages) (1923) Paper $0.50 

COMMAND STAFF AND TACTICS. (194 pages) (1923) A 
brief discussion of the general organization of a combat 
division and its component units and the functions of com¬ 
mand and staff, the tactics and technique of separate 
branches and combat orders..Paper, $0.50 

PATRIOTISM 

THE MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY. By Edward Everett Hale. 
Notes by Thomas Tapper. (59 pages) (1917) One of the best 
known and most inspiring patriotic books. $0.90 

WE AND OUR GOVERNMENT. By Jeremiah W. Jenks and 
Rufus D. Smith. (224 pages) (1922) A clear and simple 
explanation in popular language which everyone can under¬ 
stand, of how our Government works, and the fundamental 
principles underlying its organization and activities. Published 
in cooperation with Federal Educational Activities. Over 500 


illustrations... $1.40 

WE AND OUR HISTORY. By Albert B. Hart. (320 pages) 
(1923) A companion book to the above. $1.80 


WE AND OUR WORK. By Joseph French Johnson. (301 
pages) (1923) Another companion book to the above.$2.07 

THE FLAG OF THE UNITED STATES: How to Display It; 
How to Respect It, and THE STORY OF “THE STAR 
SPANGLED BANNER”. By Colonel James A. Moss. (32 pages) 
(1923) A profusely illustrated booklet treating in an authorita¬ 
tive and exhaustive manner the subject of Flag etiquette, and 
also giving a dramatic, inspiring story of the writing of the 
“Star Spangled Banner”. $0.25 

THE STARS AND STRIPES: A History of the United States 
Flag. By Charles W. Stewart, Superintendent, Library and 
Naval War Records. (89 pages) (1915). $0.70 

THE BIRTH OF OUR FLAG. By L. B. Runk. (32 pages) 
(1923) 2nd Edition. Blue cloth binding with gilt lettering. 
$1.00; Blue paper binding. $0.50 

THE STARS AND STRIPES AND OTHER AMERICAN 

FLAGS. By Peleg D. Harrison. (443 pages) (1906) .... $2.50 

THE STORY OF LIBERTY. By James Baldwin. (240 pages) 
(1919) . $0.88 

NATIONAL IDEALS AND PROBLEMS. By Maurice G. Fulton. 

(415 pages) (1918) . $1.90 

REAL BUSINESS OF LIVING. By James H. Tufts. (468 pages) 
(1918) . .....$1.72 

THE IDEALS OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT. By Edward H. 

Cotton. (325 pages) (1923) A most interesting picture of one 
of our greatest Americans whose ideals bespoke genuine 

Americanism. .... $2.50 


•“ifotne books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and 
sonig few to be ,< chewed and digested.” —I,ord Bacon. 





















PATRIOTISM—PSYCHOLOGY AND LEADERSHIP- 
QUARTERMASTER (CONSTRUCTION—CLOTHING- 
TEXTILES) 


25 


THE WINNING OF THE WEST. By Theodore Roosevelt. (3 
Vols.—332-f-266+209 pages) (1889-96) Intensely interesting and 
gripping. $12.00 

AMERICAN IDEALS AND OTHER ESSAYS. By Theodore 
Roosevelt. (411 pages) (1897) Different bindings. $4.00 and $6.50 

THE MAKING OF AN AMERICAN. By Jacob A. Riis. (284 
pages) (1922) . $2.75 

THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT. > By Frederic J. Haskin. (484 
pages) (1923) A simple, fascinating description of how the 
American Government functions. This book should be read 
by every American. $1.00 

IF HAMILTON WERE HERE TODAY. By Arthur H. Vanden- 
burg. (366 pages) (1923) . $2.50 

THE AMERICAN SPIRIT: A Basis for World Democracy. By 
Paul Monroe and Irving E. Miller. (336 pages) (1918) . . $1.40 

THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES; ITS 
SOURCES AND APPLICATIONS. By Thomas James Norton. 
(298 pages) (1922) An excellent explanation of the great 
charter under which our Government operates.$2.00 

PSYCHOLOGY AND LEADERSHIP 

MILITARY MANPOWER. By Lieutenant Colonel Lincoln C. 
Andrews. (220 pages) (1920) An interesting and instructive 
presentation of the psychologic aspects of the military pro¬ 
fession. Prepared principally for use of Cadets at West Point. 
An excellent book that every officer should read carefully. $2.50 

MORALE: THE SUPREME STANDARD OF LIFE AND CON¬ 
DUCT. By G. Stanley Hall. (378 pages) (1920) One of the 
best books ever written on the subject. Soldier morale is 
fully covered. $3.00 

LEADERSHIP. By Major Arthur H. Miller. (174 pages) 
(1920) Of particular interest to young officers of limited 
experience with troops, who are thus given the benefit of the 
practical experiences of older officers who Jiave been successful 

as leaders. $1.50 

THE MANAGEMENT OF MEN. By Colonel Edward L. Munson, 
U. S. A.; Chief, Morale Branch, War. Department, War Plans 
Division. (800 pages) (1921) An excellent work on the 
management of men and the development of morale both in 

military and in civil life. $6.00 

THE CROWD. By Gustave LeBon. (239 pages) (1896) A 
scientific and interesting dissertation on the characteristics of 
crowds. Excellent. $2.75 

QUARTERMASTER 

(See, “Logistics,” page 22) 

(a) Construction 

(Recommended by Chief of Construction Service, Q.M.G.O.) 

ARCHITECTS’ AND BUILDERS’ POCKET BOOK. (See 
page 9.) 

AMERICAN CIVIL ENGINEERS’ HANDBOOK. By Mansfield 
Merrian. (1955 pages) (1920) Gives dependable practical 
information on every feature of civil engineering. Leather 

binding, $7.00; “Atholeather” binding . $6.00 

AMERICAN ELECTRICIANS’ HANDBOOK. By Tyrell Croft. 
(823 pages) (1921) Carefully indexed for quick reference. 

Excellent for use by engineers. $4.00 

THE CONCRETE ENGINEERS’ HANDBOOK. By Hool and 
Johnson. (See page 8.) 

HANDBOOK OF COST DATA. By Hulbert G. Gillette. (1854 
pages) (1920) Contains cost data over a wide range of 
engineering works and building construction, roads, water 

works, sewer systems, etc. $6.00 

WATERWORKS HANDBOOK. By Flinn, Weston and Bogart. 
(See page 9.) 

(b) Clothing and Textiles 

The following are considered excellent on the subjects named: 

ANALYSIS OF WOVEN FABRICS. By A. F. Barker and 
E. Midgely. (319 pages) (1914) . $5.00 

We handle renewals and original subscriptions to all magazines. 





















26 


QUARTERMASTER (CLOTHING—TEXTILES—FOOD 
—REMOUNT SERVICE—TRANSPORTATION) 


DYEING INDUSTRY. By S. H. Higgins. (189 pages) 
(1919) . $3.40 

HANDBOOK OF WEAVES. By G. H. Oelsner. (397 pages) 
(1916) . $5.00 

STANDARD CLOTHS, STRUCTURE AND MANUFACTURE. 

By R. Beaumont. (342 pages) (1916) . $6.00 

STUDY OF FABRICS. By A. Turner. (193 pages) (1918) $2.00 

TEXTILES AND CLOTHING. By E. McGowan and C. A. 
Waite. (268 pages) (1922) . $1.32 

(c) Food 

(Recommended by Q. M. Subsistence School) 

FOOD INSPECTION AND ANALYSIS. By Albert E. Leach. 
(1090 pages) (1920) The leading American work on food 
analysis. $8.50 

THE NEWER KNOWLEDGE OF NUTRITION. By E. V. 

McCollum. (449 pages) (1923) The best presentation of 
important ideas on nutrition by our foremost students of 

physiological chemistry. Technical in character.$3.80 

THE AMERICAN HOME DIET. By E. V. McCollum and Nina 
Simmonds. (237 pages) (6th edition, 1923). A very readable 
presentation of the newer knowledge of nutrition as it concerns 
the diet of the American people. It also contains a series of 
menus built up to give a balanced diet containing all of the 
essential factors. Should be in the hands of every Army 

officer . $3.65 

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT 
STATION BULLETIN NO. 147, MARKET CLASSES AND 
GRADES OF MEATS. By Louis D. Hall. (144 pages) (1910) 
The best popular work on grades and cuts of meats. A very 

valuable pamphlet to all subsistence officers.$0.75 

THE BUTTER INDUSTRY. By Otto F. Hunziker. (710 pages) 
(1920) The best and most complete work on butter now 
available. $5.75 

CONDENSED MILK AND MILK POWDER. By O. F. 

Hunziker. (424 pages) (1920) The best and most complete 
work of its kind now available. Describes the manufacture, 
handling and storage of 'evaporated milk, condensed milk, and 

all styles of milk powders. 3rd Edition. $5.75 

FEEDS AND FEEDING, ABRIDGED. By W. A. Henry and 
F. B. Morrison. (440 pages) (1923) The standard work on 
the feeding of animals. Contains good descriptions of the 
values and uses of all forage products. Valuable for every 
Quartermaster. $2.75 


(d) Remount Service 

ELEMENTARY EQUITATION. By De Souza. (338 pages) 
(1922) Probably the best treatise extant on horsemanship and 
equitation. $3.50 

FEEDS AND FEEDING, ABRIDGED. By W. A. Henry and 
F. B. Morrison. (See under, “Food,” above.) 

^MODERN HORSE MANAGEMENT. By R. S. Timmis. (252 
pages) (1915) A history of the horse from ancient times and an 
excellent treatise on horse anatomy.$5.00, including duty. 

(e) Transportation 

(Recommended by the Chief of Transportation Service, 

Q. M. G. O.) 

(1) Motor Transportation 

THE MODERN GASOLINE AUTOMOBILE. (New Edition) By 
Victor W. Page. (1032 pages) (1917) A practical treatise on 
gasoline automobiles and their component parts, covering all 
types of automobiles, trucks, and tractors and supplies and 
parts for upkeep. $3.00 

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS RELATING TO MODERN 

AUTOMOBILE CONSTRUCTION, DRIVING AND REPAIR. 

By Victor W. Page. (701 pages) (1921) Gives the names of 
all important parts of an automobile and describes their func¬ 
tions. $2.00 

AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING MADE EASY. By Victor W. Page. 
(1060 pages) (1917) Contains directions for making repairs to 
all parts of motor car mechanisms. $3.00 


“Everywhere have L sought peace and found it nowhere, save 
m a corner with a book.” —Kempis. 




















QUARTERMASTER (TRANSPORTATION—MISCEL¬ 
LANEOUS) 


27 


DYKE’S AUTOMOBILE AND GASOLINE ENGINE ENCY¬ 
CLOPEDIA. Profusely illustrated. (1236 pages) (1924) Treats 
of assembly, operations, repairing and adjusting of automobiles, 
trucks, etc., including their engines, carburetion, ignition, care 
of tires and rule of the road.Cloth, $6.00; Limp, $7.50 

THE GASOLINE AUTOMOBILE. By Hobbs and Elliott. (480 
pages) (1920) Treats of the automobile, the engine, fuels, car¬ 
bureting systems, lubrication and cooling ignition systems, etc., 
together with troubles and remedies, and operation and 
care. . $3.00 

MOTOR VEHICLES AND THEIR ENGINES. By Fraser and 
Jones. (374 pages) (1923) Complete treatise on the gasoline 
automobiles, trucks and tractors, including construction and 
care. $2.00 

AUTOMOBILE STARTING, LIGHTING AND IGNITION SYS¬ 
TEMS. By Victor W. Page. (815 pages) (1920) Electrical 
systems for the motorist, the chauffeur and repairman. Ex¬ 
plains types of starting motors, generators, magnetos and igni¬ 
tion and lighting systems. $3.00 

(2) Water Transportation 

OCEAN STEAMSHIP TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT. By G. G. 
Huebner, Ph.D. (266 pages) (1920) Training in the responsi¬ 
bilities of the broker, the freight agent and other traffic agen¬ 
cies, and in the forms used in the shipping business. $3.00 

THE LAW OF THE SEA. By George L. Canfield, LL.B. and 
George W. Dalzell. (315 pages) (1921) Legal relations, rights, 
duties, and obligations of shippers, steamship owners, operators, 
masters, and seamen; the legal relations of the ship from 
construction contract to sale as salvage. $3.00 

(f) Miscellaneous 

THE QUARTERMASTER CORPS IN THE YEAR 1917 IN THE 
WORLD WAR. By Major General Henry G. Sharpe. (300 
pages) (1921) A comprehensive and interesting narrative of 
the stupendous task of the Quartermaster Corps during the 
early days of the War, the difficulties encountered, and how 
they were overcome. $3.00 

The following books are all considered excellent on the sub¬ 
jects indicated by their respective titles: 

CALORIFIC POWER OF FUELS. By H. Poole. (267 pages) 
(1918) $3.00 

FUEL PRODUCTION AND UTILIZATION. By H. S. Taylor. 
(297 pages) (1920) . $3.50 

GASOLINE AND OTHER MOTOR FUELS. By C. Ellis and 
J. V. Meigs. (709 pages) (1921). $10.00 

STORAGE OF BITUMINOUS COAL. By H. H. Stoek. (192 
pages) (1918) $0.40 

MANUAL FOR THE OILS AND GAS INDUSTRY. By R. 
Arnold. (190 pages) (1920). $2.50 

PRACTICAL TREATISE ON FRICTION, LUBRICATION, 
FATS AND OILS. By Emil F. Dieterichs. (137 pages) 

(1916) $1-50 

SHORT HANDBOOK OF OIL ANALYSIS. By A. H. Gill. (223 
pages) (1922) . $2.50 

EXAMINATION OF LUBRICATING OILS. By T. B. Stillman. 
(131 pages) (1914) . $1.75 

BOOT AND SHOE INDUSTRY. By Harding. (130 pages) 

(1922) . $1-00 

LEATHER, FROM THE RAW MATERIAL TO THE FINISHED 
PRODUCTS. By K. J. Adcock. (161 pages) (1922).$1.00 

PRACTICAL LEATHER CHEMISTRY. By A. Harvey (207 
pages) (1920) . $3.75 

COMMERCIAL PAINTS AND PAINTING. By A. S. Jennings. 
(236 pages) , ,(1914). $2.50 

PAINT TECHNOLOGY AND TESTS. By H. A. Gardner. (256 
pages) (1911) . $4.00 

HOW TO FIND COSTS IN PRINTING. By A. E. Davis. (120 
pages) (1914) . $2.00 


We have special facilities for handling books of fiction. Write 
for list of popular titles. 



























28 QUARTERMASTER (MISCELLANEOUS) — SIGNAL¬ 
LING AND COMMUNICATION—STRATEGY—TAC¬ 
TICS 


PREPARATION OF MANUSCRIPTS FOR THE PRINTER. By 

F. H. Vizetelly. (154 pages) (1924). $1.50 

PRINTING. By F. S. Henry. (318 pages) (1917). $1.50 

PRINCIPLES OF GOVERNMENT PURCHASING. By A. G. 
Thomas. (275 pages) (1919). $3.00 

PURCHASING, ITS ECONOMIC ASPECTS AND PROPER 
METHODS. By H. B. Twyford. (236 pages) (1919)-$4.00 

DAVISON’S CORDAGE, TWINE AND DUCK TRADE. (350 
pages) (1924) (22d annual).'.... $3.00 

MANUAL OF SUCCESSFUL STOREKEEPING. By W. R. 
Hotchkin. (298 pages) (1917). $3.00 

RETAIL STORE MANAGEMENT. By P. H. Nystrom. (250 
pages) (1920) . $2.50 

OUTLINES OF STATIONERY TESTING. By H. A. Bromley. 
(74 pages) (1913). $1.25 

SIGNALLING AND COMMUNICATION 

(Recommended by Chief of Signal Corps) 

PRINCIPLES OF RADIO COMMUNICATION. By J. K. More- 

croft. (935 pages) (1921) Elementary electricity from the 
viewpoint of radio and a thorough, modern exposition of the 
principles of radio. $7.50 

AMERICAN TELEPHONE PRACTICE. By Kempster B. Mil¬ 
ler. (904 pages) (1905) A thorough discussion of the telephone 
art. Standard work. $5.00 

SIGNAL COMMUNICATIONS FOR ALL ARMS. (Prepared 

at Fort Leavenworth General Service Schools.) (118 pages) 

(1923) An excellent work. $1.00 

STRATEGY 

*THE EVOLUTION OF MODERN STRATEGY. By Lieutenant 
Colonel F. N. Maude, British Army. (135 pages) .(1905) An 
excellent work.$1.50, plusi duty 

PRINCIPLES OF STRATEGY (With Historical Illustrations). 

By Colonel William K. Naylor, General Staff, U. S. A. (367 
pages) (1921) Excellent. $2.00 


TACTICS 

*AN INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF TACTICS. By 

Captain A. F. Becke, British Army. (104 pages) (1909) One 
of the best short books on the subject.$0.94, plus duty. 

DEVELOPMENT OF TACTICS—WORLD WAR. By Lieutenant 
General Balck, German Army. (295 pages) (1922) An illumi¬ 
nating discussion of the development of tactics in the World 
War. $2.00 

*THE EVOLUTION OF TACTICS. By Major Gerald Gilbert, 
British Army. (193 pages) (1907) Excellent. $0.94, plus duty. 

*A HISTORY OF TACTICS. By Captain H. M. Johnstone, 
British Army. (220 pages) (1906) An excellent work. $2.67, 
plus duty. 

TACTICS. By Balck. Translation by Colonel Walter Krueger, 
U. S. A. (Vol. I, Infantry, 539 pages) (1915) An epitome of 
the interpretation and application of tactical principles in vari¬ 
ous armies,. discussed in the light of tactical views and methods 
prevailing in Germany, and amplified by examples from mili¬ 
tary history. A standard. $1.90 

GENERAL TACTICAL FUNCTIONS OF LARGER UNITS. 

(Prepared at Fort Leavenworth General Service Schools.) (133 
pages) (1922) May be considered as introductory to “Tactical 
Principles and Decisions,” following. Excellent. $1.50 

TACTICAL PRINCIPLES AND DECISIONS. (Prepared at 
Fort Leavenworth General Service Schools.) (4 Vols.—305+315 
+295+339 pages) (1922) Comprises a series of studies given 
in the “Tactical Principles and Decisions” course at the Leaven¬ 
worth Command and General Staff School, illustrating the 
application of tactical principles to the division. $8.00 

STUDIES IN THE LEADING OF TROOPS. By General J. 
von Verdy du Vernois, German Army. (359 pages) (1906) $2.00 


“If a book is worth reading, it is worth buying .”—Ruskin. 





















TACTICS—TANKS—WAR 


SELECTED PROBLEMS RELATING TO THE CONDUCT OF 
A DIVISION.. (Prepared at the Fort Leavenworth General 
Service Schools.) (115 pages) (1922).Paper, $0.50 

PREPARING TACTICAL PROBLEMS. (Prepared at Fort 
Leavenworth General Service Schools.) (34 pages) (1916) Ex- 
cellent.Paper, $0.15 

TACTICS AND TECHNIQUE OF RIVER CROSSINGS. By 
Colonel Mertens, German Army. (Translation by Colonel 
Walter Krueger.) (253 pages) (1918) An admirable work. $3.00 

TACTICS AND DUTIES OF TRENCH FIGHTING. By Captain 
Georges Bertrand, French Army ; Major Oscar N. Solbert, Corps 
of Engineers, U. S. A. (244 pages) (1918) One of the best 
publications on the subject. $1.50 

COMBAT ORDERS. (Prepared at Fort Leavenworth General 
Service Schools.) (172 pages) (1923) An excellent pamphlet 
prepared as a result of experiences in the World War and 
studies made at the General Service Schools.Paper, $0.50 

TACTICS AND TECHNIQUE OF THE HOWITZER COM¬ 
PANY. (61 pages) (1922) (Paper) Prepared by Major J. A. 
McAndrew for use in conference on the Infantry howitzer 
company. $0.25 

TACTICS AND TECHNIQUE OF THE SEPARATE 
BRANCHES. (Prepared at Fort Leavenworth General Service 
Schools.) (239 pages) (1923).Paper, $1.00 

PRACTICAL MINOR TACTICS. By Colonel Jens Bugge. (126 
pages) (1921) Originally prepared for the use of the cadets 
of the U. S. Military Academy. Clearly and simply written. $2.00 

TANKS 

(Recommended by the Commanding Officer of the Tank 

School) 

TANKS IN THE GREAT WAR 1914-1918. By Colonel J. F. C. 
Fuller, British Army. (331 pages) (1920) An exhaustive 
history of the British Tank Corps, by its Chief of Staff, with 
brief accounts of French and American Tank Corps. Con¬ 
sidered one of the most valuable books published on Tanks. $9.00 

THE AUSTRALIAN VICTORIES IN FRANCE IN 1918. By 

Lieutenant General Sir John Monash. (351 pages) (1922) An 
interesting history of the training and fighting of the Australian 
Corps, a magnificent unit probably possessing more of the 
spirit, dash, and other characteristics of Americans than any 
other foreign unit, and whose operations are peculiarly inter¬ 
esting for the study of Tanks, as they were used in all Aus¬ 
tralian successes. Gives the handling of Tanks from the 
viewpoints of the Infantry and corps and division commanders. 
A valuable book... $8.00 


WAR 

THE BIOLOGY OF WAR. By Dr. G. F. Nicoloi, Professor of 
Physiology at Berlin University. (553 pages) (1918) A very 
interesting and learned book on the subject, and for the 
writing of which the author was imprisoned by the German 
Government. . $3.50 

THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF WAR. By F. W. Hirst. (344 
pages) (1916) As far as known, the only book on the subject 
which is treated in an able and interesting manner. $2.50 

POLITICAL ECONOMY OF WAR. By A. C. Pigou, Professor 
of Political Economy, University of Cambridge. (251 pages) 
(1921) Interesting and instructive. $3.25 

WAR COSTS AND THEIR FINANCING. By Ernest L. Bogart, 
Professor of Economics in the University of Illinois. (491 
pages) (1921) An able study of the financing of war and after¬ 
war problems of debt and taxation. $3.00 

INTERNATIONAL WAR, ITS CAUSES AND ITS CURE. By 

Oscar T. Crosby. (378 pages) (1919) One of the best and 
most exhaustive books ever published on the subject.... $1.50 

CAUSES OF INTERNATIONAL WAR. By G. L. Dickinson. 
(110 pages) (1921) Very good. $1.00 

WHY WARS COME. By Rear Admiral A. P. Niblack, U. S. N. 
(165 pages) (1922) An interesting presentation of the funda¬ 
mental causes of war. $1.50 


Use our convenient order blank—last page 

















BANTA MILITARY PUBLICATIONS 


BANTA MILITARY PUBLICATIONS 


(Distributed exclusively by BOOK DEPARTMENT, THE QUAR¬ 
TERMASTER ASSOCIATION.) 


(IMPORTANT. For a number of years, many of the “Banta 
Military Publications” have been generally recognized as stand¬ 
ards. Because of their popularity, requests for complete lists 
of these publications are received daily. In order to comply 
with such requests and for the information of those who are 
interested in these publications, a complete list of the titles now 
available is given below. So many changes in the various sub¬ 
jects covered have been brought about by new regulations and 
other War Department documents, that many of the titles listed 
are now obsolete. However, the years of publication, as indi¬ 
cated, will enable the reader to determine whether or not the 
particular books desired will meet his present requirements. 
Such of these publications as are specially recommended will be 
found described under the proper subject headings in this 
catalog.) 


ADJUTANTS’ MANUAL—Nixon (179 pages) (1918)-$1.15 

AMERICA IN BATTLE—Moss and Howland (615 pages) 

(1920) $ 2 - 50 

AMERICA IN THE WORLD WAR—Bond and Sherrill (177 

pages) (1921) ... 

ARMY PAPERWORK—Moss (See page 4.) 

AS TO MILITARY TRAINING—Wall (368 pages) (1921) 
BASIC COURSE IN FIELD ARTILLERY (Paper)—Conno 

pages) (1923) . v^*00 

BATTLE FIRE TRAINING—Turner and Fulmer (295 pages) 
(1917) $1.25 

CADENCE SYSTEM OF CLOSE ORDER DRILL, THE (Paper) 

—Lentz (124 pages) (1919). $0.50 

CATECHISM OF UNIFORM TACTICAL TRAINING—Caldwell 
(362 pages) (1916). $1.00 


CHATEAU-THIERRY—AN AMERICAN SHRINE—Moss and 

Howland (34 pages) (1920). $1.25 

COMPANY TRAINING (Paper)—Moss (123 pages) (1917) $0.50 

CRITICISMS UPON SOLUTIONS OF MAP PROBLEMS—Boyd 

(284 pages) (1915). $2.00 

ELEMENTS OF MODERN FIELD ARTILLERY—Bishop (138 

pages) (1917) . $1.50 

ENGLISH OF MILITARY COMMUNICATIONS, THE—Ganoe 

(197 pages) (1918). $1.25 

EXERCISES FOR SYSTEMATIC SCOUT INSTRUCTION— 

McKenney (146 pages) (1916). $1.25 

FIELD ARTILLERY FIRING DATA AND NOTES (Pkper)— 

Perkins (76 pages) (1917). $0.75 

FIELD MUSICIAN’S MANUAL—Canty (72 pages) (1918) $1.50 

FIELD SANITATION—Wilson (125 pages) (1917). $1.00 

FIELD SERVICE—Moss (186 pages) (1917). $1.25 

FIELD SERVICE REGULATIONS, 1914 (corrected to Jan. 14, 

1918, with questions) (101 pages). $0.75 

FIVE TACTICAL PRINCIPLES AND UNIFORM TACTICAL 

TRAINING (Paper)—Caldwell (133 pages) (1918). $0.50 

FLAG SIGNALISTS’ HANDBOOK (with blank message pad)— 

Guild (68 pages) (1917). $0.75 

FRENCH “75,” THE (Paper)—Canaday (32 pages) (1918) $0.30 
HAND TO HAND FIGHTING (Paper)—Johnson and Billings 

(89 pages) (1918). $0.75 

HOW TO SHOOT (Paper)—Moss (101 pages) (1917) .. $0.50 
INFANTRY COMPANY SUPPLY MANUAL—Williams (58 

pages) (1919) .. $0.50 

INFANTRY TRAINING—McDonald (195 pages) (1917).. $1.00 
INFANTRY TRAINING REGULATIONS—Special Drill Edition 

•—Moss and Lang (135 pages) (1924). $0.75 

INSPECTION GUIDE FOR INFANTRY TROOPS—Helmick 

(51 pages) (1917). $0.50 

JUNIOR MILITARY MANUAL—Moss and Stewart (242 pages) 

(1918) $0.60 

LAW FOR THE SOLDIER (Paper)—Childs (76 pages) 

(1917) $0.50 

LESSONS IN VISUAL SIGNALLING—Palen (60 pages) 

(1916) $0.60 

MACHINE GUNS (with supplement, 1920)—Hatcher, Wilhelm 

and Malony (379 pages) (1917). $2.50 

MANUAL FOR MEDICAL OFFICERS—Moss and Woodbury 

(289 pages) (1918). $2.00 

MANUAL OF INTERIOR GUARD DUTY (Corrected to April 


“Knowledge is Power ” Read Napoleon's advice—page 5 






























31 


BANTA MILITARY PUBLICATIONS 


15, 1917, with questions) — (112 pages) (1914). $0.50 

MANUAL OF MILITARY AVIATION—Muller (486 pages) 
(1918) $2.50 

MANUAL OF MILITARY TRAINING, Volume I—Moss and 
Lang (1066 pages) (1922). $2.50 

MANUAL OF MILITARY TRAINING, Volume II—Moss and 
Lang (759 pages) (1922). $2.50 

MANUAL OF PHYSICAL TRAINING (Reprint, War Depart¬ 
ment edition) — (335 pages) (1914). $0.75 

MEDICAL SERVICE IN MODERN WAR (Paper)—Bond and 
Martin (88 pages) (1920). $1.00 

MESS SERGEANT’S HANDBOOK—Holbrook (123 pages) 
(1916) $1.00 

MILITARY CHARACTER, HABIT, DEPORTMENT, COUR¬ 
TESY AND DISCIPLINE—Stewart (76 pages) (1913) Cloth 
binding, $1.00; Paper binding. $0.50 

MILITARY FIELD NOTEBOOK (with combat message pad)— 

Guild and Cotton (87 pages) (1918). $0.75 

MILITARY TRAINING FOR BOYS—Moss and Stewart (229 
pages) (1917) $0.50 

MOUNTED INSTRUCTION FOR FIELD ARTILLERY— 

Christian (252 pages) (1921). $2.00 

MOUNTED RIFLEMAN, THE (Cavalry Training)—Parker 
(164 pages) (1916) Cloth binding, $1.00; Paper binding, $0.60 
NONCOMMISSIONED OFFICERS’ MANUAL—Moss (343 
pages) (1917) . $1.50 

NOTES FROM THE FRONT—Yates (128 pages) (1918) $0.75 
OFFICERS’ MANUAL (Revised edition will be ready about 

June 1, 1924)—Moss (364 pages) (1917). $3.00 

OPERATION ORDERS—FIELD ARTILLERY—Bishop (105 
pages) (1916) . $1.00 

ORIGIN AND SIGNIFICANCE OF MILITARY CUSTOMS* 

(Paper)—Moss (78 pages) (1917) . $0.50 

PEACE AND WAR DUTIES OF THE ENLISTED MAN—Moss 
(141 pages) (1917) . $0.50 

PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE INFANTRY SOLDIER, 

THE—Stewart (41 pages) (1913) ..Cloth binding $0.75; Paper 

binding . $0.40 

POCKET FIELD MANUAL—Guild and Test (189 pages) 

(1917) $1.00 

PRACTICAL MILITARY TOPOGRAPHY—Moss, Guild and 

Singewald (139 pages) (1920) . $2.00 

PRINCIPLES OF SANITARY TACTICS, THE—Munson (305 
pages) (1917) . $2.15 

PRIVATES’ MANUAL—Moss (395 pages) (1918). $1.00 

PROFESSIONAL QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS FOR NAVAL 

OFFICERS—Wead (112 pages) (1921) . $3.00 

QUESTIONS ON FIELD SERVICE REGULATIONS (Paper)— 

Rubottom (102 pages) (1917) . $0.60 

RIOT DUTY (Paper)—Moss (32 pages) (1917) . $0.50 

SELF-HELPS FOR THE CITIZEN SOLDIER—Moss and 

Stewart (241 pages) (1915) . $1.25 

SETTING UP EXERCISES (Paper) (Extract from Manual of 

Physical Training)—(132 pages) (1919) . $0.35 

SOLDIER’S FOOT AND THE MILITARY SHOE—Munson (147 

pages) (1912) . $1.50 

SPANISH FOR SOLDIERS—Moss and Lang (449 pages) 

(1916) 5 1 - 00 

SPECIAL DETAILS OF FIELD ARTILLERY (Paper)—Hos¬ 
pital (112 pages) (1921) . $0.75 

SQUAD LEADERS’ NOTE BOOK, THE (with report blank 

pad)—(56 pages) (1918) . $0.75 

STUDY IN TROOP LEADING, A—Morrison and Munson (246 

pages) (1918) . $1.40 

SUPPLEMENT TO MACHINE GUNS (Paper)—Hatcher, 

Wilhelm and Malony (31 pages) (1920) . $0.35 

TACTICAL PRINCIPLES AND PROBLEMS—Hanna (459 

pages) (1913) . $2.50 

TECHNIQUE OF MODERN TACTICS, THE—Bond and 

McDonough (444 pages) (1916) . $2.65 

TEN LESSONS IN BAYONET FIGHTING—Mashbir (52 pages) 

(1917) $°- 7 5 

TRAINED CITIZEN SOLDIERY — Parker (207 pages) 

(1916) fl-25 

TRENCH WARFARE—Moss (274 pages) (1917) . $1.25 

“There is more reason for saying grace before a new book than 
before a dinner.” —Lamb. 










































MISCELLANEOUS (MILITARY) 


MISCELLANEOUS 

(Arranged alphabetically according to basic subjects, as a result 
of which order of words in titles is sometimes changed.) 

(a) Military 

ART OF FIGHTING, THE. By Rear Admiral Bradley A. 
Fiske, U. S. Navy. (372 pages) (1920) An interesting and 
instructive description of the evolution and progress of the 
art of fighting beginning with fighting between individuals, 
then between tribes, and finally amongst the highly civilized 
nations of today. An interesting chapter on strategy in peace 
and war, and as related to statesmanship. $3.00 

BATTLE STUDIES. By Colonel Ardant du Picq, French Army. 
(273 pages) (1921) Napoleon has said that in war the moral 
element is to all others as 3 to 1. Colonel Picq was one 
of France’s greatest exponents of moral force, the importance 
of which is shown in his “Battle Studies”, a military classic 
known to every French officer.. $2.50 

*BUSH WARFARE. By Lieutenant Colonel W. C. G. Heneker, 
British Army. (196 pages) (1907) One of the best books on 
the subject. $1.61, plus duty. 

CADENCE SYSTEM OF CLOSE ORDER, By Lieutenant 
Colonel Bernard Lentz. (124 pages) (1919) An excellent aid 
in attaining perfection in close order drill. $0.50 

CAMOUFLAGE, STRATEGIC. By Solomon J. Solomon. (62 
pages) (1920) Well illustrated. $9.00 

NIGHT MOVEMENTS, TRAINING IN. By Lt. Colonel C. 

Burnett. (Translated from the Japanese.) (135 pages) (1917) 
Very good. $1.25 

'MAKING OF A MODERN ARMY, THE. By RenS Radiguet. 
(179 pages) (1918) A study based on the experience of three 
years on the French Front. $1.75 

MAP PROBLEMS, SOLUTION OF. (Prepared at Fort Leaven¬ 
worth General Service Schools.) (80 pages) (1923) Paper $0.25 

PRINCIPLES OF MILITARY ART, THE. By Major Sir Francis 

Fletcher-Vane. (183 pages) (1916) . $2.00 

PROFESSION OF ARMS, THE. By Captain Elbridge Colby. 
(Due from the press March 21 , 1924.) Describes the oppor¬ 
tunities and responsibilities of military life. Probable price $1.50 

PHYSICAL TRAINING, ARMY. By Colonel Wm. H. Waldron. 

(194 pages) (1919) Presents the Army calisthenic exercises in 
new, attractive, illustrated form. $1.50 

PHYSICAL TRAINING, MANUAL OF. (335 pages) (1914) 

Reprint of War Department edition. $0.75 

PHYSICAL TRAINING, MASS. By J. E. Raycroft. (282 

pages) (1920) Approved by the War Plans Division of the 
General Staff. Forms basis for the physical training and in¬ 
struction of the United States Army. Excellent. $5.00 

SEA POWER UPON HISTORY, THE INFLUENCE OF. By 

Captain A. T. Mahan, U. S. Navy. (578 pages) (1890) Gen¬ 
erally considered the best book ever written on the sub¬ 
ject. $ 6.00 

SOLDIER’S FOOT AND THE MILITARY SHOE, THE. By 

Colonel E. L. Munson, U. S. Army. (147 pages) (1912) 
Excellent. Approved by the War Department. A stand¬ 
ard. $1.50 

SWIMMING SOLDIERS. By Captain Elbridge Colby. (128 
pages) (Due from the press April 15, 1924.) A new, scientific 
system of instruction in swimming, adapted to military pur¬ 
poses, prepared by an instructor at the Fort Benning Infantry 
School, and tried out with great success with Regular troops. 
102 illustrations. $1.25 

THIRTY—MINUTE TALKS. By Colonels M. B. Stewart and 
W. H. Waldron, Infantry, U. S. A. (380 pages) (1923) A 
series of interesting talks on organization, training, drill, 
couitesy, discipline, outposts, scouting, patroling, map reading, 
military sketching, and other subjects. Especially valuable to 
instructors. 09 


“Book Service for the Army ” is our motto. Let 


us serve you. 





















MISCELLANEOUS (MILITARY—NON-MILITARY) 


33 


TRAINING, METHODS OF. (Prepared at the Fort Leaven¬ 
worth General Service Schools.) (232 pages) (1923) A basis 
and guide for training the Army of the United States, as 
presented by a number of officers of wide experience in com¬ 
mand of troops in peace and in war. .. $1.00 

WAR OF THE FUTURE, THE. In the Light of the Lessons 
of the World War. By General von Bernhardi. (310 pages) 
(1921) Covers determining factors in modern war; tactics; 
sources of power; influence of politics and economics. Ex¬ 
cellent. ? 3. 50 


(b) Non-military 

EDUCATION AND THE ARMY. By Captain Elbridge Colby. 
(66 pages) (1922) Combines the military and pedagogic view¬ 
points with rare skill. $1.00 

HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES ARMY, A. By Major 
William A. Ganoe. (Due from the press May 23, 1924.) Covers 
the period 1775—1923, in one volume. Probable price .... $5.00 

NATIONAL DEFENSE. By J. E. Johnson. (279 pages) (1920) 
An excellent debator’s handbook on the subject.$1.80 

NATIONAL DEFENSE, THE A-B-C OF. By J. W. Muller. 
(215 pages) (1915) Very good. $1.50 

MILITARY OBLIGATION OF CITIZENSHIP, THE. Also, 
(1) The Policy of the United States in Raising and Maintain¬ 
ing Armies; (2) The Civil Obligation of the Army. By 

General Leonard Wood. (76 pages) (1915) Excellent. .. $1.25 

PACIFIC IN THE 20TH CENTURY, THE PROBLEM OF THE. 
By N. Golovin and Admiral A. D. Bubnov. (Translated by C. 
Nabokoff) (256 pages) (1920) A study of the economic, 
political and military conditions of present day Japan. .. $3.50 

SCIENCE, THE OUTLINE OF. Edited by Professor J. Ar¬ 
thur Thomson. (4 Vols.-H220 pages) (1922) Gives in plain 

language an outline of the main scientific ideas of today, en¬ 
abling one to keep fully abreast of scientific progress. More 
than 800 illustrations. Set, $18.00 

STAR-BOOK, A BEGINNER’S. (Revised Edition) By Kelvin 
McKready (Edgar Gardner Murphy). (148 pages) (1923) An 
easy guide to the stars and to the astronomical uses of the 
opera-glass, the field glass and the telescope. Includes charts 
of the moon, tables of the planets and star maps on a new 
plan. $5.00 

STRATEGY OF MINERALS, THE. By George O. Smith. (360 
pages) (1919) A study of the mineral factor in the world 
position of America in war and in peace. $2.50 


YOUR COOPERATION SOLICITED 

This unique catalogue, which is also a complete and authori¬ 
tative guide to military literature, is the result of painstaking 
and conscientious effort on the part of some of the Army’s 
ablest historians and best-known military students, and has 
been produced at considerable cost. It fills a need that has 
long been felt and is being distributed gratuitously, at con¬ 
siderable expense, for your benefit. The cost of broadcast dis¬ 
tribution is prohibitive. However, we want each and every 
member of the Army of the United States (Regular Army, 
National Guard and Organized Reserve) who would appreciate 
the value of such a bibliography, as well as all librarians, edu¬ 
cators and others in civil life who are interested in military 
literature, to receive a copy. ..You can assist us in bringing 
about a judicious distribution of this valuable bibliography by 
mentioning its gratuitous distribution to your friends and ac¬ 
quaintances who would likely be interested in such a complete 
and reliable guide. Send us their names and addresses—or 
have them write us—and copies will be mailed promptly with¬ 
out cost or obligation of any kind. 

If you find this catalogue of benefit to you—will you cooperate 
with us in the manner suggested above? 


Any boolt, in any language, in any land—we can get it for you. 















34 


INDEX—SUBJECTS, AUTHORS AND TITLES 


INDEX 

1. See page 1 for explanation of this Catalogue and information 

regarding The Army Cooperative Book Club, and page 3 for 
Table of Contents. 

2. See page 30 for complete list of Banta publications. 

3. The titles are in Roman type, authors in Italics, and subjects in 


boldface type. 

Page 


A 

Achievements of Cavalry— 

Wood . 6 

Adcock —Leather, From the 
Raw Material to the Fin¬ 
ished Products. 27 

Adjutants’ Manual— Nixon ... 30 

Administration . 4 

Aerial Navigation —Zahm . 4 

Aerodynamics, Applied— 

Thompson . 4 

Aeronautics . 4 

Aeroplane Structures— 

Pippard and Pmtchard . 4 

Africa, With Botha and Smuts 

in —Whittal . 19 

Air Navigation —Card . 4 

Airplane Engine Encyclopedia 

—Angle . 4 

Alexander —Military Memoirs 

of a Confederate. 13 

Alexander —Dodge . 5 

Allen, George A .—The Great 

War . 16 

Allen, Henry T .—My Rhine¬ 
land Journal. 17 

Allenby’s Final Triumph— 

Massey . 19 

Altliam —The Principles of 

War . 6 

America in Battle —Moss and 

Howland . 18 

America in France— Palmer.. 16 

America in the China Relief 

Expedition —Daggett . 14 

America in the World War— 

Bond and Sherrill . 16 

American Business Law— 

Sullivan . .... 9 

American Campaigns— Steele. 12 

American Civil Engineers’ 

Handbook —Merrian . 25 

American Electricians’ Hand¬ 
book —Croft . 25 

American Government, The— 

Haskin . 25 

American History—See “His¬ 
tory” . 10 

American Home Diet, The— 
McCollum and Simmonds... 26 
American Ideals and Other 

Essays —Roosevelt . 25 

American Occupation of the 
Philippines, 1898-1912, The 

—Blount . 14 

American Red Cross Abridged 
Text Book on First Aid— 

Lynch . 20 

American Revolution, The— 

Fi>slc(z> •••••»•••••• 11 

American Rifle, The —Wheien 23 
American Spirit, The —Munroe 

and Miller . 25 

American Telephone Practice 

—Miller . 28 

American Wars . 12 

America’s Duty —Wood . 12 

Analysis of Woven Fabrics— 

Barker and Midgely . 25 

Andrews —Military Manpower. 25 
Andrews and Benson —Theory 
and Practice of Aeroplane 

Design . 5 

Angle —Airplane Engine Ency¬ 
clopedia . 4 

Anti-Aircraft Defense. 7 

Antietam and Fredericksburg 
—Palerey . 18 


Page 


Applied Aerodynamics— 

Thompson . 4 

Architects’ and Builders’ 

Pocket-Book, The— Kidder.. 9 

Army, The United States, A 

History of — Ganoe . «3 

Army of the Cumberland, The 

—Cist . 13 

Army Paperwork— Moss...... 4 

Arnold —Manual for the Oils 

and Gas Industry. 27 

Artillery—See, “Coast Artil¬ 
lery” and “Field Artillery” 

Art, Military, The Principles 

of— Fletcher-Vane . 32 

Art of Fighting, The —Fiske 32 
Art of Speaking and Writing 
the English Language— 

Cody . 22 

Art of War . 5 

Ashhurn — The Elements of 

M'litary Hygiene. 19 

As to Military Training —Wall 30 
Aston — Letters on Amphibious 

Wars . 15 

As to Polo —Forbes . 6 

Astronomy: 

A Beginner’s Star Book— 

McKready . 33 

Atkinson —Marlborough (and 
The Rise of the British 

Army) . 14 

Atlanta, The Campaign of— 

Cox . 13 

At the Supreme War Council 

— Wm'iht . 18 

Australian Victories in France 

in 1918, The —Monash . 29 

Austro-Prussian War (Seven 

Week’s War) (1866). 15 

Automatic Rifle, The— Infan¬ 
try School . 20 

Automobile and Gasoline En¬ 
cyclopedia— Dyke . 27 

Automobile Construction, 
Questions and Answers Re¬ 
lating to Modern— Page.... 26 
Automobile Repairing Made 

Easy —Page . 26 

Automobile Starting, Lighting 
and Ignition Systems —Page 27 
Automobile, The Gasoline— 

Hobbs and Elliott . 27 

Automobile, The Modern Gaso¬ 
line —Page . 26 

Aviation, Manual of Military 

—Muller . 81 

Azan —The War of Positions.. 6 
B 

Bdlck —Development of Tactics 

—World War. 28 

—Tactics . 28 

Baldwin — The Story of Liberty 24 

Banker’s Credit Manual, The 

—Wall . 10 

Banking: 

Money and Banking— 

Holdsworth . 10 

Banks —Putnam’s Correspond¬ 
ence Handbook. 22 

Barker and Midgely —Analy¬ 
sis of Woven Fabrics. 25 

Bartlett —Port Arthur: The 

Siege and Capitulation. 15 

Basic Course in Field Artillery 

—Connor . 30 

Bassett —Our War With Ger¬ 
many: A History. 17 














































































35 


Battle Fire Training —Turner 

and Fulmer . 23 

Battle of Booby’s Bluffs —List 20 
Battle of the Marne— Perris.. 18 
Battle of the Somme, The— 

Gibbs . 18 

Battle Studies —Picq . 32 

Battlefields of the World War; 

A Study in Military Geog¬ 
raphy —Johnson . 23 

Bayonet Fighting, Ten Lessons 

In —Mnshbir . 31 

Beaumont —Standard Cloths, 
Structure and Manufacture 26 
Becke —An Introduction to the 

History of Tactics. 28 

Becker, Johnson, Dodd and 
Paxson —Riverside History 

of the United States. 11 

Before the War— Haldane.... 17 
Beginnings of New England, 

The —Fiske . 11 

Benson and Andrews —Theory 
and Practice of Aeroplane 

Design . 5 

Bernhardi —Cavalry in War 

and Peace. 6 

—The War of the Future. . 33 
Bernstorff —My Three Years in 

America . 17 

Bertrand —Tactics and Duties 

of Trench Fighting. 29 

Billings and Johnson —Hand 

to Hand Fighting. 30 

Biology of War, The —Nicoloi 29 
Bird’s Eye View of the Civil 

War, A —Dodge . 13 

Birth of Our Flag, The —Runk 24. 
Bituminous Coal, Storage of— 

Stoek . 27 

Bishop —Elements of Modern 

Field Artillery. 30 

—Operation Orders—Field 

Artillery . 31 

Bjornstad —Small Problems 

for Infantry. 20 

Blount —The American Occu¬ 
pation of the Philippines, 

1898-1912 . 14 

Boer War (1899-1901) 15 

Boer War, The Second— W'sser 15 
Bogart —Direct and Indirect 

Costs of the War. 18 

—War Costs and Their Fi¬ 
nancing . 29 

Bogart, Flinn and Weston 

—Waterworks Handbook... 9 
Bond and Martin —Medical 

Service in Modern War.... 20 
Bond and McDonough —The 
Technique of Modern Tactics 31 
Bond and Sherrill —America in 

the World War. 16 

Bonney and Harper —Highway 

Engineers’ Handbook. 8 

Bookkeeping and Accounting 

—Klein .:. 10 

Boot and Shoe Industry 

—Harding . 27 

Booth and Hill —The War Ro¬ 
mance of the Salvation Army 17 
Boraston —Sir Douglas Haig’s 

Despatches . 17 

Borbstaedt and Dwyer —His¬ 
tory of The Franco-German 

War . 15 

Boxer Rebellion, 1900 14 

Boyd —Criticisms Upon Solu¬ 
tions of Map Problems. 30 

Brief History of the Great 

W ar, A —Hayes . 16 

Bromley —Outlines of Station¬ 
ery Testing. 28 

Bubnov and Golovin —The Prob¬ 
lem of the Pacific in the 20th 

Century . 33 

Buchan —A History of the 

Great War. 16 

Bugge —Practical Minor Tactics 29 


Building: 

Architects’ and Builders’ 
Pocket-Book, The —Kidder 9 
Building Estimator’s Refer¬ 
ence Book, The— Walker. 9 
Handbook of Cost Data 


—Gillette . 25 

Burnett —Training in Night 


“ V/iiiV/llto •••••••••••••••• O*r 

Burnod — Napoleon’s Maxims 

of War. ;.... 6 

Bush Warfare— Heneker . 82 

Butter Industry, The 

—Hunziker . 20 

C 

Cadence System of Close Or¬ 
der Drill— Lentz . 82 

Caesar— Dodge . 5 

Caldwell —Catchechism of Uni¬ 
form Tactical Training. 30 

Caldwell —Five Tactical Prin¬ 
ciples and Uniform Tactical 

Training . 30 

Callwell —The Dardanelles.... 18 
Calorific Power of Fuels 

— Poole . 27 

Camouflage, Strategic 

— Solomon . 32 

Campaign of Atlanta, The 

— Cox . 13 

Campaign of Marengo, The 

—Sargent . 14 

Campaign of Koniggratz, The 

—Wagner . 15 

Campaign of Santiago de Cuba, 

The— Sargent . 14 

Campaign of Waterloo, The 

—Ropes . 14 

Campaigns, American— Steele. 12 
Campaigns of the Civil War 
— (13 vols.—various authors) 12 

Canfield —Law of the Sea_ 27 

Cannaday —The French “75”.. 30 


Canty —Field Musician’s Man¬ 


ual . 30 

Card— Air Navigation. 4 

Catechism of Uniform Tactical 

Training —Caldwell . 30 

Causes of International War 

—Dickinson . 29 

Cavalry . 6 

Cavalry in Future Wars 

—Bernhardi . 6 

Cavalry in War and Peace 

—Bernhardi . 6 

Cavalry Tactics as Illustrated 
bv the War of the Rebellion 

—Gray . q 

Cavalry Training—(The Mount¬ 
ed Rifleman )—Parker . 31 

Chancellorsville and. Gettys¬ 
burg —Doubleday . 13 

Cliateau-Thierry: An American 
Shrine —Moss and Howland 18 
Chemistry, Practical Leather 

—Harvey . 27 

Chemical Warfare . 7 

Chemistry, Creative —Slosson . 7 

Chemistry, Ordnance . 24 

Childs —Law for the Soldier 30 
China Relief Expedition, 

America in the— Daggett... 14 
Chinese-Japanese War (1894- 

1895 . 15 

Christian —Mounted Instruction 

for Field Artillery. 31 

Cist —The Army of the Cum¬ 
berland . 13 

Citizen Soldiery, Trained 

Parker . 31 

Citizenship, The Military Ob¬ 
ligations of —Wood . 33 

Civil Engineers’ Hand-book 

—Merrian . 25 

Civil Engineers’ Pocket-Book 

—Trautwine . 8 

Civil War . 12 

Clarkson —Industrial America 

in the World War. 18 

Clausewitz —On War. 5 












































































36 


Close Order Drill, Cadence 

System of —Lentz . 32 

Clothing and Textiles. 25 

Cloths, Standard, Structure 
and Manufacture— Beaumont 20 
Coal, Bituminous, Storage of— 

Stock . 27 

Coast Artillery . 7 

Cody —Art of Speaking and 
Writing the English Lan¬ 
guage- . 22 

Colby —Education and the 

Army . 33 

—The Profession of Arms.. 32 

—Swimming Soldiers. 32 

Colonial History . 11; 12 

Combat Orders— General Ser¬ 
vice Schools . 29 

Command Staff and Tactics 
— General Service Schools.. 24 
Commercial Airships— Pratt.. 5 
Commercial Law, Manual of 

—Spencer . 10 

Commercial Paints and Paint¬ 
ing— Jennings . 27 

Communication and Signalling 28 
Concrete Engineers’ Handbook 

—Hool and Johnson . 8 

Condensed Milk and Milk Pow¬ 
der —Hunziker . 26 

Company Training —Moss . 30 

Conduct of War, The— von der 

Goltz . 6 

Confederacy, The Sunset of 

the —Schaff . 13 

Connectives of English Speech 

■—Fernald . 21 

Connor —Basic Course in Field 

Artillery . 30 

Constitution of the United 
States, The; Its Sources 
and Applications— Norton... 25 

Constitutional Law . 22 

Construction, Quartermaster. . 25 


Cooley —The General Principles 
of Constitutional Law in the 
United States of America... 22 
Corbett —England in the Seven 


Years’ War. 14 

—Naval Operations. 19 

Cordage, Twine, and Duck 

Trade —Davison . 28 

Cordonnier —The Japanese in 

Manchuria . 15 

Correspondence Handbook, 

Putnam’s —Banks . 22 

Cortina —French in Twenty 

Lessons . 22 

—Spanish in Twenty Lessons 22 
Cotton —The Ideals of Theo¬ 
dore Roosevelt. 24 

Cotton and Guild —Military 

Field Notebook. 31 

Courts-Martial Procedure— 

Infantry Association . 22 

Cox —The Campaign of Atlanta 13 
—The March to the Sea— 

Franklin and Nashville. 13 

Creasy —The Fifteen Decisive 
Battles of the World (From 
Marathon to Waterloo).... 12 
Creative Chemistry— Slosson... 7 
Crimean War (1854-1856).... 15 
Critical Period of American His¬ 
tory, 1783-1789, The— Fiske.. 11 
Criticisms Upon Solutions of 

Map Problems —Boyd . 30 

Croft —American Electricians’ 

Handbook . 25 

Crosby —International War, Its 

Causes and Its Cure. 29 

Crowd, The —LeBon . 25 

Crowe —General Smuts’ Cam¬ 
paign in East Africa. 19 

Customs of the Service . 8 

Customs, Military, Origin and 

Significance of —Moss . 31 

D 

Daggett —America in the China 
Relief Expedition. 14 


Dardanelles, The— Callwell... 18 
Davis, A. E .—How to Find 

Costs in Printing. 27 

Davis, G. B .—Elements of In¬ 
ternational Law. 22 

Davison’s Cordage, Twine and 

Duck Trade. 28 

Day by Day With the Russian 

Army —Pares . 18 

de Bussigny —Equitation. 6 

Decisive Battles of Modern 

Times, The —Whitton . 12 

Decisive Battles, The Fifteen, 

of the World —Creasy . 12 

Deductions from the World 
War— Freytag-Loringhoven... 16 
Defense of Duffer’s Drift 

—Gawne and Swinton . 20 

Denison —A History of Cavalry 6 
Desert Mounted Corps, The 

—Preston . 7 

Desk-Book of Errors, A 

—Vizetelly . 21 

De Souza —Elementary Equita¬ 
tion . 26 

Development of Tactics— 

World War —Balck . 28 

Development of the United 
States from Colonies to a 
World Power, The —Farrand 11 
Dickinson —Causes of Inter¬ 
national War. 29 

Dictionaries . 21 

Dieterichs —Practical Treatise 
on Friction, Lubrication, 

Fats and Oils. 27 

Diplomacy of the War of 1812, 

The —Updyke . 12 

Diplomatic Background of 
the War (1870-1914), The 

—Seymour . 17 

Diplomatic Documents Relat¬ 
ing to the Outbreak of the 

European War —Scott . J 7 

Direct and Indirect Costs of 

the War —Bogart . 18 

Discipline: 

Military Character, Habit, 
Deportment, Courtesy, and 

Discipline —Stewart . 31 

Officers’ Manual —Moss . 4 

Discovery of America, The 

—Fiske . ii 

Division: 

Selected Problems Relating to 
the Conduct of a Division— 
General Service Schools.... 29 
Dodd, Paxson, Becker and 
Johnson —Riverside History 

of the United States. 11 

Dodge —Alexander . 5 

—A Bird’s Eye View of the 

Civil War. 13 

—Caesar . 5 

—Great Captains. 5 

—Gustavus Adolphus. 5 

—Hannibal . 5 

—Napoleon . .... 5 

Donovan and Moore —Military 

Motor Transportation. 8 

Doubleday —Chancellorsville 

and Gettysburg.. 13 

Doyle —A History of the Great 

War . 17 

Dredges and Dredging —Prelini 8 
Dredging Engineering—Simon. 8 

Drill: 

Drill of the Howitzer Com¬ 


pany —Infantry School... 20 
Infantry Training Regula¬ 
tions (Special Drill Edi¬ 


tion)— Moss and Lang... 20 
Du Boulay —An Epitome of 
the Chino-Japanese War, 

1894-95 15 

Duchene —Flight Without 

Formulae - . 4 

Dutch and Quaker Colonies in 

America, The— Fiske . 11 

Duties of the Machine Gun 
Personnel —Infantry School. 20 











































































37 


Dwyer and Borbstaedt —His¬ 
tory of the Franco-German 

War . 15 

Dyeing Industry —Higgins - 26 

Dyke’s Automobile and Gaso¬ 
line Engine Encyclopedia.. 27 


E 

Earl of Cromer —Modern 

Egypt . 15 

Early Wars . 14 

Eastlake and Yoshi-Aki — 

Heroic Japan. 15 

Economic Consequences of the 

Peace, The —Keynes . 18 

Education and the Army 

—Colby . 33 

Electricity: 

American Electricians’ 

Handbook —Croft . 25 

Electrical Engineers’ Pocket- 

Book —Foster . 8 

Handbook for Electrical En¬ 
gineers —Pender . 8 

Elementary Equitation 

—De Souza . 26 

Elements of International 

Law —Davis . 22 

Elements of Military Hygiene, 

The —Ashburn . 19 

Elements of Modern Field Ar¬ 
tillery —Bishop . 30 

Elliott and Hobbs —The Gaso¬ 
line Automobile. 27 

Ellis and Meigs —Gasoline and 

Other Motor Fuels. 27 

Employment of Machine Guns 

—Short . 23 

Engineering: 

Handbook of Cost Data— 

Gillette . 25 

Engineers’, Highway, Hand¬ 
book —Harger and Bonney.. 8 
Engineers’, Marine, Handbook 

—Sterling . 8 

Engineers’, Mechanical, Hand¬ 
book —Marks . 8 

Engineers’, Structural, Hand¬ 
book —Ketchum . 9 

England in the Seven Years’ 

War —Corbett . 14 

English of Military Communi¬ 
cations —Ganoe . 4 

English Language . 21 

English Synonyms, Antonyms 
and Prepositions— Fernald .. 21 
English Words and Their 
Background —McKnight .... 21 
Epitome of the Chino-Japanese 
War, 1894-95, An —Du Boulay 15 

Equitation —de Bussigny . 6 

Equitation, Elementary 

—De Souza . 26 

Essavs, American Ideals and 

Other —Roosevelt . 25 

Evolution of Modern Strategy, 

The —Maude . 28 

Evolution of Tactics, The 

—Gilbert . 28 

Examination of Lubricating 

Oils —Stillman . 27 

Exercises for Systematic Scout 

Instruction —McKenny . 6 

Explosives —Marshall . 24 

Explosives, Military —Weaver 24 
Explosives, Ordnance . 24 


Expressive English— Fernald.. 22 
F 

Fabrics, Study of— Turner — 26 
Face to Face With Kaiserism 


—Gerard . 17 

Falkenhayn —The German 

General Staff. 16 

Farrand —The Development of 
the United States from Col¬ 
onies to a World Power... 11 

Farrow —Gas Warfare. . 7 

Fats: 

Practical Treatise on Fric¬ 
tion, Lubrication, Fats 
and Oils —Dieterichs . 27 


Feeds and Feeding Abridged 

—Henry and Morrison . 26 

Fernald— Connectives of Eng¬ 
lish Speech '. 21 

—English Synonyms, Anto¬ 
nyms and Prepositions... 21 

—Expressive English. 22 

Fifteen Decisive Battles of the 
World (From Marathon to 

Waterloo), The— Creasy _ 12 

Fifteen Thousand Useful 

Phrases —Kleiser . 22 

Field Artillery . 9 

Basic Course in Field Artil¬ 
lery— Connor . 30 

Field Artillery, Elements of 

Modern —Bishop . 30 

Fire Control Instruments 
—Field Artillery School .. 9 

Firing Data and Notes 

— Perkins . 80 

Mounted Instruction for 
Field Artillery —Christum 31 
Operation Orders—Field Ar¬ 
tillery— Bishop . 31 

Special Detail of Field Ar¬ 
tillery— Hospital . 31 

Field Book of the War of 

1812 —Lossing . 12 

Field Fortifications —General 

Service Schools . 10 

Field Musician’s Manual 

— Canty . 30 

Field Sanitation —Wilson . 30 

Field Service —Moss . 30 


Field Service Regulations— 

War Department (Reprint) 30 
Field Service Regulations, 
Questions on— Rubottom.... 31 
Fighting, Hand to Hand 


—Johnson and Bilim "S . 30 

Fighting, The Art of— Fiske.. 32 

Finance . 10 

Fire Control Instruments 

—Field Artillery School - 9 

First Aid, American Red 
Cross Abridged Text 

Book on —Lynch .; 20 

First Napoleon, The— Ropes.. 14 
First Seven Divisions, The 

—Hamilton . 18 

Fisher and Fisk —Health for 

the Soldier and Sailor. 20 

Fisk and Fisher —Health for 

the Soldier and Sailor. 20 

Fiske —The American Revo¬ 
lution .. 11 

—The Art of Fighting. 32 

—The Beginnings of New 

England . 11 

—The Critical Period of 

American History.l 783-1789 11 
—The Discovery of America 11 
—The Dutch and Quaker 

Colonies in America. 11 

—New France and New 

England . 11 

—The War of Independence 11 
Five Tactical Principles and 
Uniform Tactical Training 

—Caldwell . 30 

Flag, United States . 24 

Flag of the United States, 

The —Moss . 24 

Flag Signalists’ Handbook 

—Guild . 30 

Fletcher-Vane —The Principles 

of Military Art. 32 

Flight Without Formulae 

—Duchene . 4 

Flinn, Weston and Bogart — 

Waterworks Handbook. 9 

Foch —The Principles of War 5 
Foch, the Winner of the War 

—Recouly . 16 

Food . 26 

Food Inspection and Analysis 

—Leach . 26 

Forbes —As to Polo. 6 

Force —From Fort Henry to 
Corinth . 12 














































































38 


Foreign Policy, President 

Wilson’s — Scott . 17 

Fortification . 10 

Fourmer —Napoleon 1. 14 

Franco-German War, The 
—Maurice . 15 


Franco-German War (1870).. 15 

Frazer and Jones —Motor 

Vehicles and Their Engines 27 
Frederick the Great and the 


Seven Years’ War —Longman 14 

French Language . 22 

French —Nineteen-Fourteen .. 18 
French in Twenty Lessons 

—Cortina . . 22 

French “75,” The —Cannaday 30 
From Fort Henry to Corinth 

—Force . 12 

From Serbia to Jugoslavia 

(1914-1918)— Gordon-Smith. . 19 
Frothing ham —A Guide to 
the Military History of 

the World War. 16 

—The Naval History of the 

World War. 19 

Fuel Production and Utiliza¬ 
tion —Taylor . 27 

Fuel's: 

Calorific Power of Fuels 

—Poole . 27 * 

Fuel Production and Utiliza¬ 
tion —Taylor . 27 

Gasoline and Other Motor 
Fuels —Ellis and Meigs... 27 
Fuller —Tanks in the Great 

War, 1914-1918. 29 

Fulmer and Turner —Battle 

Fire Training. 23 

Fulton —National Ideals and 
Problems . 24 


Freytag-Loringhoven —Deduc¬ 
tions from the World War 16 

Friction: 

Practical Treatise on Fric¬ 


tion, Lubrication, Fats 
and Oils —Dieterichs . 27 

G 

Gallipoli Diary —Hamilton _ 19 

Ganoe —English of Military 

Communications . 4 

—A History of the United 

States Army. 33 

Gardner —Paint Technology 

and Tests. 27 

Gas Industry, Manual for the 

Oils and —Arnold . 27 

Gas Warfare —Farrow . 7 

Gasoline Automobile, The 

—Hobbs and Elliott . 27 

Gasoline and Other Motor- 

Fuels —Ellis and Meigs . 27 

Gawne and Swinton —Defense 

of Duffer’s Drift. 20 

General Foch at the Marne 

—Goffic . 18 

General Principles of Consti- 
tional Law in the United 
States of America, The— 

Cooley . 22 

General Smuts’ Campaign in 

East Africa —Crowe . 19 

General Staff and Its Prob¬ 
lems, The —Ludendorff . 16 

General Tactical Functions of 
Larger Units —General Ser¬ 
vice Schools . 28 

Geography, Military . 23 

Gerard —Face to Face With 

Kaiserism . 17 

—My Four Years in Germany 16 
German Cavalary in Belgium 
and France, 1914, The 

—Poseck . 7 

German General Staff, The 

—Falkenhayn . 16 

German Offensive of July, 1918, 
The —General Service Schools 9 
Germany’s High Sea Fleet in 
the World War —Scheer _ 19 


Gettysburg and Chancellors- 

ville —Doubleday . 13 

Gibbs —The Battle of the 

Somme . 18 

—The Way to Victory. 18 

Gilbert —The Evolution of 

Tactics . 28 

Gill —Short Handbook of Oil 

Analysis . 27 

Gillette —Handbook of Cost 

Data . 25 

Gleaves —The History of the 
Transport Service, 1917-1919 19 
Goffic —General Foch at the 

Marne . 18 

Golovin and Bubnov —The 
Problem of the Pacific in 

the 20 th Century. 33 

Goltz —Jena to Eylan. 15 

—The Nation in Arms. 5 

Gordon-Smith —From Serbia to 

Jugoslavia (1914-1918). 19 

Gourko —War and Revolution 

in Russia (19J4-1917). 18 

Government Purchasing, Prin¬ 
ciples of —Thomas . 28 

Grant, U. S., Personal Mem¬ 
oirs of. 13 

Gray —Cavalry Tactics as Il¬ 
lustrated by the War of the 

Rebellion . 6 

Great Captains —Dodge . 5 

Great War, The —Allen . . 16 

Grenville Kleiser’s Correspond¬ 
ence Course in Good English 22 
Grieves —Military Sketching 

and Map Reading. 23 

Guard Duty, Manual of Inte¬ 
rior —War Department . 30 

Guernsey —A Reference His¬ 
tory of the War. 17 

Guide to the Military History 
of the World War, A—■ 

Frothingham . 16 

Guild —Flag Signalists’ Hand¬ 
book . 30 

Guild, and Cotton —Military 

Field Notebook. 31 

Guild, and Moss —Practical 

Military Topography. 23 

Guild and Test —Pocket Field 

Manual . 31 

Gunners’ Instruction —Coast 

Artillery Corps Officers . 7 

Gunnery —Coast Artillery 

Board . 8 

Gustavus Adolphus— Dodge... 5 
H 

Haldane —Before the War.... 17 
Hale —The Man Without a 

Country . 24 

Hall, G. S. —Morale: The Su¬ 
preme Standard of Life and 

Conduct . 25 

Hall. L. D .—University of Illi¬ 
nois Agricultural Experiment 
Station Bulletin No. 147, 
•Market Classes and Grades 

of Meat. 26 

Hal sen —The Literary Digest 
History of the World War 16 
Hamilton. E. W .—The First 

Seven Divisions. 18 

—The Soul and Body of an 

Army . r 

Hamilton, Ian —Gallipoli Diary 19 
—A Staff Officer’s Scrap Book 15 
Hamley —The Operations of 

War . 6 

—The War in the Crimea.. 15 
Hand Bombers and Rifle Gren¬ 
adiers, Manual for— Infan¬ 
try School . 20 

Handbook for Electrical Engi¬ 
neers —Pender . . 8 

Handbook for the National 

Guardsman in Ranks. 23 

Handbook of Cost Data 

—Gillette . 25 

Handbook of Weaves —Oelsner 26 










































































39 


Hand to Hand Fighting 
—Johnson and Billings. ..r. 30 
Hanna —Tactical Principles 

and Problems. 31 

Hannibal —Dodge . 5 

Harding —Boot and Shoe In¬ 
dustry . 27 

Harger and Bonn eg —Highway 

Engineers’ Handbook. 8 

Harrison —The Stars and 
Stripes and Other Amer¬ 
ican Flags.. 24 

Hart —We and Our History.. 24 

Harvey —Practical Leather 

Chemistry . 27 

Haskin —The American Gov¬ 
ernment . 25 

Hatcher, Wilhelm and Malony 
—Machine Guns (with Sup¬ 
plement, 1920). 30 

—Supplement to Machine 

Guns . 31 

Hayes —A Brief History of the 

Great War. 16 

Hygiene . 19 

Hygiene and Sanitation 

—Pierson . 20 

Headlam —The History of 
Twelve Days (July 24 

to August 4, 1914). 3 7 

Health . 19 

Health for the Soldier and 
Sailor —Fisher and Fisk.... 20 
Heavy (Coast) Artillerymen’s 
Field Pocketbook, T h e— 

Coast Artillery School . 8 

Heavy Artillery Materiel— 

Coast Artillery Board . 8 

Helmick —Inspection Guide for 

Infantry Troops. 30 

Heneker —Bush Warfare. 32 

Henry —Printing . 28 

Henry and Morrison —Feeds 

and Feeding Abridged. 26 

Heroic Japan —Eastlake and 

Yoshi-Aki . 15 

Higgins —Dyeing Industry.... 26 
Highway Engineers’ Handbook 

—Harger and Bonney . 8 

Hill and Booth —The War Ro¬ 
mance of the Salvation Army 17 
Hindenburg —Out of My Life 16 
Hirst —The Political Economy 

of War. 29 

History . 10 

History of Aeronautics— 

Vivian, Marsh and Lockwood 4 
History of Cavalry, A—Den¬ 
ison . 6 

History of the Cavalry of the 
Army of the Potomac— 

Rhodes . 7 

History of the Franco-German 
War —Borbstaedt and Dwyer 15 
History of the Great War, A 

—Buchan . 16 

History of the Great War, A 

—Doyle . 17 

History of Tactics, A 

—Johnstone . 28 

History of the Transport Ser¬ 
vice, 1917-1919, The —Gleaves 19 
History of the United States 

Army, A —Ganoe . 33 

History of the World War 

—March . 16 

History of Twelve Days (July 
24 to August 4, 1914), The 

-—Headlam . 17 

Hobbs and Elliott —The Gaso¬ 
line Automobile. 27 

Hodges —Post-War Ordnance.. 24 
Hohenlohe —Letters on Artil¬ 
lery . 9 

Holbrook —Mess Sergeant’s 

Handbook . 31 

Holdsworth —Money and 

Banking . 10 

Hollweg —Reflections on the 
World War. 16 


Hool and Johnson —Concrete 

Engineer’s Handbook. 8 

Horse Management, Modern 

—Timmis . 26 

Hospital —Special Details of 

Field Artillery. 81 

House and Seymour —What 
Really Happened at Paris.. 17 
Hotchkin —Manual of Success¬ 
ful Storekeeping. 28 

Houssaye —Napoleon and the 

Campaign of 1814. 14 

How Jerusalem Was Won 

—Massey . 19 

How to Find Costs in Print¬ 
ing —Davis . 27 

How to Shoot —Moss . 30 

Howland —Military History of 

the World War. 16 

Howland and Moss —America 

in Battle. 18 

—Chateau-Thierry: An 

American Shrine. 18 

Howitzer Company, Instruments 

of the —Infantry School . 20 

Howitzer Company, Tactics 
end Technique of the— 

McAndrew . 29 

Howitzer Company, The Drill 

of —Infantry School . 20 

Hozier —The Seven Weeks’ 

War . 15 

Huebner —Ocean Steamship 

Traffic Management. 27 

Huidekoper —The Military Un¬ 
preparedness of the United 

States . 12 

Humphreys —The Virginia Cam¬ 
paign of ’64 and ’65; the 
Army of the Potomac and 

the Army of the James. 13 

Hunziker —The Butter Indus¬ 
try . 26 

—Condensed Milk and Milk 

Powder . 26 

I 

Ideals of Theodore Roosevelt, 

The —Cotton . 24 

If Hamilton Were Here To¬ 
day —Vandenburg . 25 

Industrial America in the 

World War —Clarkson . 18 

Infantry . 20 

Infantry Company Supply 

Manual —Williams . 30 

Infantry School Publications. 20 
Infantry Training —McDonald 30 
Infantry Training Regulations 
—Special Drill Edition— 

Moss and Lang . 20 

Infantry Troops, Inspection 

Guide for —Helmick . 30 

Inspection Guide for Infantry 

Troops —Helmick . 30 

Instruments of the Howtizer 
Company —Infantry School.. 20 
Interior Guard Duty, Manual 

of —War Department . 30 

International Law . 22 

International War, Its Causes 

and Its Cure —Crosby . 29 

Introduction to the History of 

Tactics, An —Becke . 28 

Introductory Meteorology— 
National Research Council.. 4 
Invasion of the City of Wash¬ 
ington, The —Stahl ..'. 12 

J 

Japan, Heroic: A History of 
the War Between China and 
Japan—Eastlake and Yoshi- 

Aki . 15 

Japanese in Manchuria, The 

— Cordonnier . 15 

Jefferson Davis, The Life and 

Personality of —Schaff . 13 

Jena Campaign, The —Maude 15 

Jena to Eylan —Goltz . 15 

Jenks and Smith —We and 

Our Government. 24 



















































































40 


Jennings —Commercial Paints 

and Paintings. 27 

Jerusalem, How, Was Won 

—Massey . 19 

Johnson, D. W .—Battlefields of 
the World War; A Study in 

Military Geography. 23 

—Topography and Strategy 

in the War. 23 

Johnson, J. E .—National De¬ 
fense . 33 

Johnson, J. F .—We and Our 

Work . 24 

Johnson and Billings —Hand 

to Hand Fighting. 30 

Johnson and Hool —Concrete 

Engineer’s Handbook. 8 

Johnson and Smith —Theory 
and Practice of Surveying.. 9 

Johnson, Dodd, Paxson and 
Becker —Riverside History 

of the United States. 11 

Johnston —Napoleon: (A Short 

Biography) . 14 

Johnstonji —A History of Tac¬ 
tics . 28 

Jomini —Life of Napoleon.... 14 
Jones and Frazer —Motor Ve¬ 
hicles and Their Engines... 27 
Junior Military Manual —Moss 

and Stewart . 30 

K 

Kartoum (1885-1898) . 15 

Ketchum —Structural Engi¬ 
neers’ Handbook—. 9 

Keynes —The Economic Conse¬ 
quences of the Peace. 18 

Kidder —The Architects’ and 

Builders’ Pocket-Book. 9 

Klein —Bookkeeping and Ac¬ 
counting . ip 

Kleiser —Fifteen Thousand 

Useful Phrases. 22 

Knox —With the Russian 

Army (1914-1917). 18 

Koniggratz, The Campaign of 

—Wagner . 15 

T. 

Lang and Moss —I n f a n t r y 
Training Regulations — Spe¬ 
cial Drill Edition. 20 

—Manual of Military Train¬ 
ing . 20 

—Spanish for Soldiers. 22 

Languages (English, Spanish, 

and French) . 21 

Lansing —The Peace Negotia¬ 
tions . 17 

Last Four Months, The: How 
the War Was Won —Maurice 18 

Law . 22 

American Business Law 

—Sullivan . 9 

Manual of Commercial Law 

—Spencer . 10 

Law for the Soldier— Childs.. 30 

Law of the Sea —Canfield _ 27 

Leach —Food Inspection and 

Analysis . 20 

Leadership —Miller . 25 

Leadership and Psychology ... 25 
Leather Chemistry, Practical 

—Harvey . 27 

Leather, From the Rn.w Mate¬ 
rial to the Finished Products 

—Adcock . 27 

LeBon —The Crowd. 25 

Lefebure —The Riddle of the 

Rhine . 7 

Lentz —Cadence System of 

Close Order Drill. 32 

Lessons in Visual Signalling 

—Palen . 30 

Letters on Amphibious Wars 

—Aston . 15 

Letters on Artillery 

—Hohenlohe . 9 

Letter Writing: 

Putnam’s Correspondence 
Handbook —Banks . 22 


L'fe and Personality of Jef¬ 
ferson Davis, The — Schaff... 13 


Life of Napoleon —Jomini - 14 

Life of Napoleon, The —Rose 14 
Light Mortar, Mechanics of 

—Infantry School .• • S2 

Light Mortar, Technique of 

—Infantry School . 21 

List— Battle of Booby’s Bluffs 20 
Literary Digest History of the 
World War, The— Halsey... 16 
Little History of the Great 

War —Vast . 

Livermore and Ropes —Story 

of the Civil War. 13 

Lockwood, Vivian and Marsh 


—History of Aeronautics... 4 

Logistics . 22 

Longman —Frederick the Great 
and the Seven Years’ War 14 
Lossing —Field Book of the 

War of 1812 . 12 

Lossing’s Field Book of the 

Revolution— Lossing . H 

Lubrication: 

Practical Treatise on Fric¬ 
tion, Lubrication, Fats 

and Oils— Dieterichs . 27 

Ludendorff —The General Staff 

and Its Problems. 16 

—Ludendorff’s Own Story.. 16 

Lynch —American Red Cross 
Abridged Text Book on First 

Aid . 20 

M 


Machine Guns . 23 

Machine Guns (with Supple¬ 
ment, 1920)— Hatcher, Wil¬ 
helm, and Malony . 30 

Machine Guns in Attack 

—Infantry School . 20 

Machine Guns in Defense 

—Infantry School . 20 

Machine Gun Personnel, Du¬ 
ties of the —Infantry School 20 
Mahan —Sea Power in Its Re¬ 


lations to the War of 1812.. 12 
—The Influence of Sea Pow¬ 
er Upon History. 32 

Mailing List —Infantry School 20 
Making of a Modern Army, 

The —Radiguet . 32 

Making of an American, The 

—Riis . 25 

Malony, Hatcher and Wilhelm 
—Machine Guns (with Sup¬ 
plement, 1920). 30 

—Supplement to Machine 

Guns . 31 

Management of Men, The 

—Munson . 25 

Man Without a Country, The 

—Hale . 24 

Manual for Hand Bombers and 
Rifle Grenadiers — Infantry 

School . 20 

Manual for Medical Officers 
—Moss and Woodbury —... 30 
Manual for the Oils and Gas 

Industry —Arnold . 27 

Manual of Commercial Law 

—Spencer . 10 

Manual of Interior Guard 
Duty — War Department 

(Special Edition). 30 

Manual of Military Aviation 

—Muller . 31 

Manual of Military Training— 

—Moss and Lang . 20 

Manual of Physical Training 
—War Department (Reprint) 31 
Manual of Successful Store- 

keeping —Hotchkim .28 

Man Power, Military —Andrews 25 


Map Making and Map Reading: 
Practical Military Topo¬ 
graphy— Moss and Guild. 23 
Map Problems, Criticisms 

Upon Solutions of— Boyd... 30 
Map Problems, Solutions of 
—General Service Schools... 32 
Map Reading— Infantry Asso¬ 
ciation .23 








































































41 


Map Reading and Map Making 
March —History of the World 

War .. 

March on Paris and the Bat¬ 
tle of the Marne, The —von 

Kluck . 

March to the Sea, The—Frank¬ 
lin and Nashville— Cox.... 
Marengo, The Campaign of 

Sargent . 

Marine Engineers’ Handbook 

—Sterling . 

Marks —Mechanical Engineers’ 

Handbook . 

Marlborough (and The Rise of 
the British Army )—Atkinson 
Marlborough Campaigns 

—May cock . 

Marlborough’s Campaign (1702- 

1711) . 

Marne, Battle of the— Perris.. 
Marne, General Foch at the 

—Goffic . 

Marne, The March on Paris 
and the Battle of the —von 

Kluck . 

Marsh, Lockwood and Vivian 
—History of Aeronautics... 

Marshall —Explosives . 

Martin and Bond —Medical 
Service in Modern War.... 
Mashbir —Ten Lessons in Bay¬ 
onet Fighting. 

Massey —Allenby’s Final Tri¬ 
umph . 

—How Jerusalem Was Won 
Maude —The Evolution of 

Modern Strategy. 

—The Jena Campaign. 

Maurice —The Franco-German 

War . 

—The Last Four Months: 

How the War Was Won.. 
—The Russo-Turkish War.. 
Maycock —Marlborough Cam¬ 
paigns . 

Me Andrew —Tactics and Tech¬ 
nique of the Howtizer Com¬ 
pany . 

McCollum —The Newer Knowl¬ 
edge of Nutrition. 

McCollum and Simmonds —The 

American Home Diet. 

McDonald —Infantry Training 
McDonough and Bond —The 
Technique of Modern Tactics 
McGowan and Waite —Textiles 

and Clothing. 

McKenny —Exercises for Sys¬ 
tematic Scout Instruction.. 
McKnight —English Words and 

Their Background. 

McKready —A Beginner’s Star- 

Book . 

McPherson —A Short History 

of the Great War. 

Meat: 

University of Illinois Agri¬ 
cultural Experiment Sta¬ 
tion Bulletin No. 147, Mar¬ 
ket Classes and Grades of 

Meat —Hall . 

Mechanical Engineers’ Hand¬ 
book —Marks . 

Mechanical Maneuvers —Coast 

Artillery School . 

Mechanics of Light Mortar 

—Infantry School . 

Mechanics of One Pounder 

—Infantry School . 

Medical Officers, Manual for 

—Moss and Woodbury . 

Medical Service in Modern 
War —Bond and Martin.... 
Meigs and Ellis —Gasoline and 

Other Motor Fuels. 

Memoirs of Baron de Marbot.. 
Memoirs, Personal, of U. S. 

Grant . 

Merrian —American Civil Engi¬ 
neers’ Handbook. 


Mertens —Tactics and Tech¬ 
nique of River Crossings... 29 
Mesopotamia, My Campaigns 

in— Townshend . 19 

Mess Sergeant’s Handbook 

—Holbrook . 81 

Metereology, Introductory 
—National Research Council 4 
Meuse-Argonne— Our Greatest 

Battle— Palmer . 18 

Mexican War . 12 

Midgely and Barker —Analysis 

of Woven Fabrics. 25 

Military Art, The Principles of 

— Fletcher-Vane . . 32 

Military Character, Habit, De¬ 
portment, Courtesy and Dis¬ 
cipline— Stewart . 81 

Military Courtesy — Officers’ 

Manual— Moss . 4 

Military Customs, Origin and 

Significance of— Moss . 81 

Military Explosives— Weaver.. 24 
Military Field Notebook 


— Guild and Cotton . 81 

Military Geography . 23 

Military History . 12 

Military History of the World 

War— Howland . 16 

Military Hygiene, The Ele¬ 
ments of— Ashburn . 19 

Military Manpower— Andrews 25 
Military Memoirs of a Confed¬ 
erate— Alexander . 13 

Military Motor Transporta¬ 
tion— Donovan and Moore.. 8 

Military Obligation of Citizen¬ 
ship, The— Wood . 33 

Military Organization of the 
United States— General Ser¬ 
vice Schools . 24 

Military Sketching and Map 

Reading —Grieves . 23 

Military Topography, See, 
“Map Making and Map 
Reading” 

Military Training for Boys 
— Moss and Stewart . 31 


Military Training, See, “Train¬ 
ing” 

Military Unpreparedness of 
the United States, The— 

—Huidekoper . 12 

Milk, Condensed, and Milk 

Powder —Hunziker . 20 

Miller, A. H .—Leadership_25 

Miller, K. B .—American Tele¬ 
phone Practice . 28 

Miller and Monroe —The 

American Spirit. 25 

Minor Tactics, E/actical 

—Bugge .*.. 29 

Miscellaneous, Military . 32 

Miscellaneous, Non-military. . . 33 

Mitchell —Our Air F"orce. 4 

Modern Egypt —Earl of Cromer 15 
Modern Gasoline Automobile, 

The —Page . 26 

Modern Horse Management 

—Timmis . 26 

Monash —The Australian Vic¬ 
tories in France in 1918... 29 
Money and Banking— Holds- 

worth . ... 10 

Monroe and Miller —The Amer¬ 
ican Spirit. 25 

Moore and Donovan —Military 

Motor Transportation. 8 

Morale: The Supreme Standard 
of Life and Conduct —Hall 25 
Morecroft —Principles of Radio 

Communication ._28 

Morrison and Munson —A 
Study in Troop Leading... 31 

Moss —Army Paperwork. 4 

—Company Training. 80 

—Field Service. 30 

—Flag of the United States, 

The . 24 

—How to Shoot. 80 

—Noncommisisoned Officers’ 
Manual . 81 


: 23 

10 

18 

18 

14 

8 

t 

8 

t 

i 14 

14 

“'it 

, 18 

18 

i 

18 

i. 

4 

24 

20 

31 

19 

i 19 

28 

15 

15 

18 

15 

14 

29 

26 

26 

• 30 

! 31 

! 

26 

6 

: 

21 

33 

16 

26 

8 

8 

20 

20 

SO 

20 

27 

15 

13 

25 










































































42 


—Officers’ Manual. 4 

—Origin and Significance of 

Military Customs. 31 

•—Peace and War Duties of 

the Enlisted Man. SI 

—Privates’ Manual. 31 

—Riot Duty. 22 

—Trench Warfare. 31 

Moss and Guild —Practical 

Military Topography. 23 

Moss and Howland ■—America 

in Battle. 18 

—Chateau-Thierry: An 

American Shrine. 18 

Moss and Lang —Infantry 
Training Regulations — 

Special Drill Edition. 20 

—Manual of Military Train¬ 
ing . 20 

—Spanish for Soldiers. 22 

Moss and Stewart —Junior Mil¬ 
itary Manual_-.. 30 

—Military Training for Boys 31 
—Self-Helps for the Citizen 

Soldier . 31 

Moss and Woodbury —Manual 

for Medical Officers. 30 

Motor Transportation . 26 


Motor Transportation, Mili¬ 
tary— Donovan and Moore.. 8 
Motor Vehicles and Their En¬ 


gines— Fraser and Jones... 27 
Mounted Instruction for Field 

Artillery— Christian . 31 

Mounted Rifleman, The (Cav¬ 
alry Training)— Parker . 31 

Muller, LeR. H. —Manual of 

Military Aviation. 81 

Muller, J. W. —The A-B-C of 

National Defense. 33 

Munson —The Management of 

Men . 25 

—The Principles of Sani¬ 
tary Tactics. 20 

—The Soldier’s Foot and the 
Military Shoe. 82 


Munson and Morrison —A 
Study in Troop Leading... 81 
Musketry and Rifle Platoon 
Training— Infantry School.. 21 
Musketry and Small Arms ... 23 
My Campaigns in Mesopota¬ 


mia— Townshend . 19 

My Four Years in Germany* 

— Gerard . 16 

My Memoirs— Tirpitz . 19 

My Rhineland Journal— Allen 17 
My Three Years in America 

—Bernstorff . 17 

N 

Napier’s Peninsula War ( 1807 - 

1814 )— Napier . 14 

Napoleon: (A Short Biogra¬ 
phy)— Johnston . 14 

Napoleon I— Fourmer . 14 

Napoleon and the Campaign 

of 1814 — Houssaye . 14 

Napoleon as a General 

— Wartenburg . 14 

Napoleon— Dodge . 5 


Napoleon, The First— Ropes.. 14 
Napoleon, The Life of— Rose 14 
Napoleonic Wars (1793-1815). 14 
Napoleon’s Maxims of War 


—Burnod . 6 

National Defense— Johnson... 33 
National Defense, The A-B-C 

of— Muller . 33 

National Guard . 23 

National Ideals and Problems 
—Fulton . 24 


Nation in Arms, The— Goltz.. 5 
Naval History of the World 
War, The— Frothingham.... 19 

Naval Operations— Corbett 19 

Naval Operations, World War. 19 
Naylor —Principles of Strategy 28 
New England, The Beginnings 


of — Fiske . 11 

New France and New England 
— Fiske . 11 


Newer Knowledge of Nutri¬ 
tion, The —McCollum . 26 

Niblack —Why Wars Come... 29 
Nicolay —The Outbreak of the 

Rebellion .;. 12 

Nicoloi —The Biology of War 29 
Night Movements, Training in 

—Burnett . 32 

Nineteen-Fourteen —French .. 18 
Nixon —Adjutants’ Manual... 30 
Noncommissioned Officers’ 

Manual —Moss . 31 

Norton —The Constitution of 
the United States: Its Sources 

and Applications. 25 

Notes from the Front —Yates 31 
Notes on Field Artillery 

—Spaidding . 9 

Nutrition, The Newer Knowl¬ 
edge of— McCollum ... 20 

Nystrom —Retail Store Man¬ 
agement . 28 

O 

Ocean Steamship Traffic Man¬ 
agement —Huebner . 27 

Oelsner —Handbook of Weaves 26' 

Officers’ Manual —Moss . 4 

Oil Analysis, Short Handbook 

of—Gill ' . 27 

Oils and Gas Industry, Man¬ 
ual for the —Arnold . 27 

Oils: 

Practical Treatise on Fric¬ 
tion, Lubrication, Fats 

and Oils —Dieterich . 27 

One Pounder, Mechanics of 

—Infantry School . 20 

One Pounder, Technique of 

—Infantry School . 21 

On War —Clausewitz . 5 

Operation Orders—Field Ar¬ 
tillery —Bishop . 31 

Operations of War, The 

—Hamley . 6 

Ordnance . 23 

Ordnance and Gunnery 

—Tschappat . 23 

Organization . 24 

Origin and Significance of 

Military Customs— Moss.... 31 

Our Air Force —Mitchell . 4 

Our Greatest Battle (The 
Meuse-Argonne )—Palmer .. 18 
Our War With Germany: A 

History —Bassett . 17 

Outbreak of the Rebellion, 

The —Nicolay . 12 

Outline of History, The —Wells 11 
Outlines of Stationery Testing 

-—Bromley . 28 

Out of My Life— Hindenburg.. 16 
P 

Pacific in the 20th Century, 

The Problem of the —Golovin 

and Bubnov . 33 

Page —Automobile Starting, 
Lighting and Ignition Sys¬ 
tems . 27 

—Questions and Answers Re¬ 
lating to Modern Auto¬ 
mobile Construction, Driv¬ 
ing Repair. 20 

—The Modern Gasoline Au¬ 
tomobile . 20 

Paint Technology and Tests 

—Gardner . 27 

Paints and Painting: 

Commercial Paints and 

Painting —Jennings . 27 

Palen —Lessons in Visual Sig¬ 
nalling . so 

Palerey —Antietam and Fred¬ 
ericksburg . i 3 

Palmer —America in France.. 16 
—Our Greatest Battle (The 

Meuse-Argonne) . is 

Paperwork, Army —Moss . 4 

Pares —Day by Day with the 

Russian Army. is 

Parker —The Mounted Rifle¬ 
man (Cavalry Training)... 31 
—Trained Citizen Soldiery.. 31 














































































43 


Patriotism . 

Patrolling: 

Scouting and Patrolling 

—Infantry School . 

Paxson, Becker, Johnson and 
Dodd —Riverside History of 

the United States. 

Peace and War Duties of the 

Enlisted Man —Moss . 

Peace Negotiations, The 

—Lansing . 

Pender —Handbook for Elec¬ 
trical Engineers. 

Peninsula. The —Webb . 

Perkins —Field Artillery Fir¬ 
ing Data and Notes. 

Perris —Battle of the Marne.. 
Personal Memoirs of U. S. 

Grant .. 

Phisterer —Statistical Record.. 
Physical Development of the 
Infantry Soldier, The— 

Stewart . 

Philippine Insurrection . 

Physical Training, Army 

—Waldron . 

Physical Training, Manual of 
War Department (Reprint) 
Physical Training, Mass 

—Raycroft . 

Physical Training: 

Setting Up Exercises. 

Psychology and Leadership . . 

Picq —Battle Studies. 

Pierson —Hygiene and Sanita¬ 
tion ... 

Pig on —Political Economy of 

War . 

Pilcher —War According to 

Clausewitz . 

Pippard and Pritchard —Aero¬ 
plane Structures. 

Pocket Field Manual —Guild 

and Test . 

Political Economy of War, 

The —Pigou . 

Political Economy of War, 

The —Hirst . 

Polo, As to —Forbes . 

Pond —The Shenandoah Valley 

in 1864. 

Poole —Calorific Power of 

Fuels . 

Poor —Simplified Navigation 

(Aeronautics) . 

Port Arthur: The S'ege and 
.Capitulation —Bartlett .... 
Poseck —The German Cavalry 
In Belgium and France, 1914 
Post-War Ordnance— Hodges.. 
Practical Leather Chemistry 

—Harvexf . 

Practical Military Topography 
— Moss, Guild and Singewald 
Practical Minor Tactics —Bugge 
Practical Treatise on Friction, 
Lubrication, Fats and Oils 

—Dieterichs . 

Pratt —Commercial Airships.. 
Prelini —Dredges and Dredging 
Preparing Tactical Problems 
—General Service Schools.. 
Preparation and Use of the 
Sand Table —Infantry School 
Preparation of Manuscripts 
for the Printer— Vizetelly.. 
President Wilson’s Foreign 

Policy —Scott . 

Preston —The Desert Mounted 

Corps . 

Price —The Story of the Salo- 

nica Army. 

Printing —Henry . 

Principles of Government Pur¬ 
chasing —Thomas . 

Principles of Military Art, The 

—FI etcher-Vane . 

Principles of Radio Communi¬ 
cation —Morecroft . 

Principles of Sanitary Tactics, 

The —Munson . 

Principles of Strategy —Naylor 


Principles of War, The 

—Alt ham . 6 

Principles of War, The— Foch 5 
Printer, Preparation of Manu¬ 
scripts for the— Vizetelly ... 28 
Printing, How to Find Costs 

in— Davis . 27 

Pritchard and Pippard —Aero- 

nlane Structures. 4 

Privates’ Manual— Moss . 31 

Problems: 


Selected Problems Relating 
to the Conduct of a Di¬ 


vision — General Service 

Schools . 29 

Small Problems for Infantry 

—Bjomstad . 20 

(See “Map Problems”) 
Problems, Map, Criticisms 

Upon Solutions of— Boyd.. 30 


Problems, Tactical, Preparing 
— General Service Schools.. 29 
Profession of Arms, The— Colby 32 
Professional Questions and 
Answers for Naval Officers 

—Wead . si 

Public Water Supply— Tur- 

neaure and Russell . 9 

Purchasing, Government, Prin¬ 
ciples of— Thomas . 28 

Purchasing, Its Economic As¬ 
pects and Proper Methods 

— Twyford . 28 

Pure Logistics— Thorpe . 22 

Putnam’s Correspondence 
Handbook— Banks . 22 

Q 

Quartermaster . 25 

Quartermaster Corps in the 
Year 1917 in the World 

War, The— Sharpe . 27 

Questions and Answers Re¬ 
lating to Modern Automobile 
Construction, Driving and 

Repair —Page . .. 26 

Questions on Field Service 

Regulations— Rubottom _ 31 

R 

Radiquet— The Making of a 


Modern Army. 32 

Radio . 28 

Radio Communication, Princi¬ 
ples of —Morecroft . 28 

Raycroft —-Mass Physical 

Training .. 32 

Real Business of Living —Tufts 24 
Recouly —Foch, the Winner of 

the War.16 

Reference History of the War, 

A —Guernsey . a .. 17 

Reflections on the World War 

—Hollweg . 16 

Remount Service . 26 

Retail Store Management 

—Nystrom . 28 

Rhodes —History of the Cav¬ 
alry of the Army of the 

Potomac . 7 

Riddle of the Rhine, The 

Lefebure . 7 

Rifle, American', The —Whelen 23 
Rifle Grenadiers and Hand 
Bombers, Manual for— In¬ 
fantry School . 20 

Rifleman, Military, Suggestions 

to —Whelen . 23 

Riis —The Making of an Amer¬ 
ican . 25 

Riot Duty —Moss . 22 

River and Harbor Construc¬ 
tion —Townsend . 9 

River Crossings, Tactics and 
Techniaue of —Mertens . 29 


Riverside History of the 
United States, The— Becker, 
Johnson, Dodd and Paxson 11 
Roosevelt —American Ideals 

and Other Essays. 25 

—The Winning of the West 25 
Ropes —The Campaign of 
Waterloo . 14 


24 

21 

11 

31 

17 

8 

12 

30 

18 

13 

13 

31 

14 

32 

32 

32 

31 

25 

32 

20 

29 

5 

4 

31 

29 

29 

6 

13 

27 

S 

15 

7 

24 

27 

23 

29 

27 

5 

8 

29 

21 

28 

17 

7 

19 

28 

28 

32 

28 

20 

28 









































































44 


,—The First Napoleon.. 

Ropes and Livermore —Story 

of the Civil War. 

Rose —The Life of Napoleon.. 
Rubottom —Questions on Field 
Service Regulations........ 

Ruggles —Stresses in Wire- 
W rapped Guns and in Gun 

r’flwinp’PQ . 

Runk —The Birth of Our Flag 
Russell and Turneaure —Public 

Water Supply. 

Russian Army, Day by Day 

with the —Pares . 

Russian Army (1914-1917), 

With the —Knox . 

Russo-Japanese War (1904- 

1905) . 

Russo-Turkish War (1877) ... 
Russo-Turkish War, The 
—Maurice . 

S 

Salonica Army, The Story of 

the —Price . 

Salvation Army, The War Ro¬ 
mance of the —Booth and Hill 
Sand Table, Preparation and 
Use of the —Infantry School 
Sanitary Tactics, The Princi¬ 
ples of —Munson . 

Sanitation . 

Sanitation, Field— Wilson.... 
Santiago de Cuba, The Cam¬ 
paign of —Sargent . 

Sargent —The Campaign of Ma¬ 
rengo . 

—The Campaign of Santiago 

de Cuba. 

—The Strategy of the West¬ 
ern Front. 

Schaff —The Life and Person¬ 
ality of Jefferson Davis.... 
—The Sunset of the Confed¬ 
eracy . 

Scheer —Germany’s High Sea 
Fleet in the World War... 
Science, The Outline of 

—Thomson . 

Scott —Diplomatic Documents 
Relating to the Outbreak of 

the European War. 

—President Wilson’s For¬ 
eign Policy.. 

■—Survey of International 
Relations Between the 
United States and Germany 
Scouting and Patrolling 

—Infantry School . 

Sea Power in Its Relation to 
the War of 1812— Mahan... 
Sea Power Upon History, The 

Influence of —Mahan . 

Second Boer War, The 

—Wisser . 

Selected Problems Relating to 
the Conduct of a Division 
—General Service Schools.. 
Self-Helps for the Citizen Sol¬ 
dier —Moss and Stewart.... 

Setting Up Exercises. 

“Seventy-Five,” The French 

—Canaday . 

Seven Weeks’ War, The 

—Hozier . 

Seven Years’ War (1756-1763) 
Seymour —The Diplomatic Back¬ 
ground of the War (1870- 

1^14) . 

Seymour and House —What 
Really Happened at Paris.. 
Sharpe —T h e Quartermaster 
Corps in the Year 1917 in 

the World War. 

Shenandoah Valley in 1864, 

The —Pond . 

Sherrill and Bond —America in 

the World War. 

Shoe, The Soldier’s Foot and 
the Military —Munson 


Shoes: 

Boot and Shoe Industry 

—Harding . 

Shoot, How to —Moss . 

Short —Employment of Ma¬ 
chine guns. 

Short Handbook of Oil Analy¬ 


sis —Gill . 27 

Short History of the Great 

War, A —McPherson . 16 

Short History of the World, 

A —Wells . 10 

Signal Communications for 
all Arms —General Service 

Schools . 28 

Signalling and Communication 28 
Signalling, Lessons in Visual 

—Palen . 30 

Simmonds and McCollum —The 

American Home Diet. 26 

Simon —Dredging Engineering 8 
Simplified Navigation (Aero¬ 
nautics )—Poor . 5 

Singewald, Moss and Guild 
—Practical Military Topog¬ 
raphy . 31 

Sir Douglas Haig’s Dispatches 

—Boraston . 17 

Slosson —Creative Chemistry.. 7 

Small Arms and Musketry . . 23 
Small Problems for Infantry 

—Bjornstad . 20 

Smith, G. O .—The Strategy of 

Minerals . 33 

Smith, J. H .—The War With 

Mexico . 12 

Smith and Jenks —We and 

Our Government. 24 

Smith and Johnson —Theory 
and Practice of Surveying.. 9 
Soldier’s Foot and the Mili¬ 
tary Shoe, The —Munson ... 32 
Solomon —Strategic Camou¬ 
flage . 32 

Somme, The Batte of the 

—Gibbs . 18 

Soul and Body of an Army, 

The —Hamilton . 6 

Spanish American War . 14 

Spanish for Soldiers —Moss 

and Lang . 22 

Spanish in Twenty Lessons 

—Cortina .. 22 

Spanish, Language . 22 

Spaulding —Notes on Field Ar¬ 
tillery . 9 

Special Details of Field Ar¬ 
tillery —Hospital . 31 

Spencer —Manual of Commer¬ 
cial Law. 10 

Squad Leaders’ Note Book, 

The . 31 

Staff Officer’s Scrap Book, A 

—Hamilton . 15 

Stahl —The Invasion of Wash¬ 
ington . 12 

Standard Cloths, Structure 
and Manufacture —Beaumont 26 
Star-Book, A Beginner’s 

—McKready . 33 

Stars and Stripes, The 

Stewart ... 24 

Stars and Stripes and 
Other American Flags, 

The —Harrison . 24 

Stationery Testing, Outlines of 

—Bromley . 28 

Statistical Record— Phisterer.. 13 
Steele —American Campaigns.. 12 

Sterling —Marine Engineers’ 

Handbook . 8 

Stewart, C. W .—The Stars and 

Stripes . . .... 24 

Stewart, M. B .—Military Char¬ 
acter, Habit, Deportment, 
Courtesy and Discipline.... 31 
—The Physical Development 
of the Infantry Soldier... 31 
Stewart and Moss —Junior Mil¬ 
itary Manual. 30 


—Military Training for Boys 31 


14 

13 

14 

31 

23 

24 

9 

18 

18 

15 

15 

15 

19 

17 

21 

20 

19 

30 

14 

14 

14 

18 

13 

13 

19 

33 

17 

17 

17 

21 

12 

32 

15 

29 

31 

31 

30 

15 

14 

17 

17 

27 

13 

16 

32 






































































45 


—Self-Helps for the Citizen 

Soldier . 

Stewart and Waldron —Thirty- 

Minute Talks . 

Stillman —Examination of Lu¬ 
bricating Oils. 

Stoek —Storage of Bituminous 

Coal . 

Storage of Bituminous Coal 

—Stoek . 

Storekeeping, Manual of Suc¬ 
cessful —Hotchkin . 

Store Management, Retail 

—Nystrom . 

Story of Liberty, The —Baldwin 
Story of Mankind, The 

—Van Loon . 

Story of the Civil War —Ropes 

and Livermore . 

Story of the Salonica Army, 

The —Price . 

Strategy .. 

Strategy of Minerals, The 

—Smith . 

Strategy of the Western Front, 

The —Sargent . 

Stresses in Wire-Wrapped 
Guns and in Gun Car¬ 
riages —Ruggles . 

Structural Engineers’ Hand¬ 
book —Ketchum . 

Studies in the Leading of 

Troops —Vernois . 

Study in Troop Leadin'*, A 
—Morrison and Munson.... 

Study of Fabrics —Turner - 

Sudan, The (1885-1898) . 

Suggestions to Military Rifle¬ 
men —Whelen . 

Sullivan —American Business 

Law . 

Sunset of the Confederacy, 

The —Schaff . 

Supplement to Machine 
Guns— Hatcher, Wilhelm 

and Malony . 

Supreme War Council, At the 

—Wright . 

Survey of International Rela¬ 
tions Between the United 
States and Germany, A 

—Scott . 

Surveying, Theory and Prac¬ 
tice of —Johnson and Smith 
Swimming Soldiers —Colby - 

T 

Tables of Organization 
—General Service Schools.. 
Tactical Principles and Decis¬ 
ions —General Service 

Schools . 

Tactical Principles and Prob¬ 
lems —Hanna ... 

Tactical Principles, Five, and 
Uniform Tactical Training 

—Caldwell . 

Tactical Problems, Preparing 
—General Service Schools.. 
Tactics: (See, “Tactics,” page 
28 ) 

Command, Staff and Tactics 
—General Service Schools 
General Tactical Functions 
of Larger Units —General 

Service Schools . 

History of Tactics, A 

—Johnstone . 

Introduction to the History 

of Tactics, An —Becke - 

Practical Minor Tactics 

—Bugge .•..•. • • 

Principles of Sanitary Tac¬ 
tics, Th e-^-Munson . 

Tactics —Balck . 

Tactics and Duties of Trench 

Fighting —Bertrand . 

Tactics and Technique of 
Artillery —General Service 

Schools . 

Tactics and Technique of 
River Crossings— Mertens. 


Tactics and Technique of 
the Howitzer Company— 

Me Andrew . 29 

Tactics and Technique of 
the Separate Branches— 
General Service Schools ... 29 
Technique of Modern Tac¬ 
tics, The —Bond and Mc¬ 


Donough . 31 

Tanks . 29 

Tanks in the Great War, 1914- 

1918 —Fuller . 29 

Taylor, F .—The Wars of Marl¬ 
borough . 14 

Taylor, H. S .—Fuel Produc¬ 
tion and Utilization. 27 

Technique of Light Mortar 

—Infantry School . 21 

Technique of Modern Tactics, 
The —Bond and McDonough 31 
Technique of One Pounder 

—Infantry School . 21 

Telephone Practice, American 

—Miller . 28 

Ten Lessons in Bayonet Fight¬ 
ing —Mashbir 31 

Terrain Exercises— Waldron.. ZO 
Test and Guild —Pocket Field 

Manual . 31 

Textiles and Clothing . 25 

Textiles and Clothing— Mc¬ 
Gowan and Waite . 26 

Theory and Practice of Aero¬ 
plane Design —Andrews and 

Benson . 5 

Theory and Practice of Sur¬ 
veying —Johnson and Smith 9 
Thirty-Minute Talks 

Stewart and Waldron . 32 

Thomas —Principles of Govern¬ 
ment Purchasing. 28 

Thompson —Applied Aero¬ 
dynamics . 4 

Thomson —The Outline of 

Science . 33 

Thorne —Pure Logistics. 22 

Timmis —Modern Horse Man¬ 
agement . 26 

Tirpitz —My Memoirs . 19 

Topography, See, “Map Making 

and Map Reading”. 23 

Topography and Strategy in 

the War —Johnson . 23 

Topography for Field Artil¬ 
lery —Field Artillery School 9 
Townsend —River and Harbor 

Construction . 9 

Townshend —My Campaigns in 

Mesopotamia . 19 

Training: 

As to Military Training 

—Wall . 30 

Battle Fire Training 

Turner and Fulmer . 23 

Catechism of Uniform Tac¬ 
tical Training— Caldwell.. 30 
Company Training 

—Moss . 30 

Exercises for Systematic Scout 
Instruction —McKenny ... 6 

Five Tactical Principles and 
Uniform Tactical Training 

—Daldwell . 30 

Infantry Training 

—McDonald . 30 


Infantry Training Regula¬ 
tions (Special Drill Edi¬ 
tion )—Moss and Lang... 20 
Junior Military Manual (For 
Boys )—Moss and Stewart 30 
Manual of Military Training 

Moss and Lang . 20 

Mounted Rifleman (Cavalry 
Training), The— Parker.. 31 
Musketry and Rifle Platoon 
Training —Infantry School 21 
Study in Troop Leading, A 
—Morrison and Munson.. 31 
Trained Citizen Soldiery 
—Parker . 81 


31 

32 

27 

27 

27 

28 

28 

24 

.11 

13 

19 

28 

33 

18 

23 

9 

28 

31 

26 

15 

23 

9 

13 

31 

18 

17 

9 

32 

24 

28 

31 

30 

29 

24 

28 

28 

28 

29 

20 

28 

29 

9 

29 




































































4G 


Training in Night Move¬ 
ments — Burnett . 32 

Training, Methods of— 

General Service Schools... 33 
See “Physical Training.” 
Transportation . 26 


Transportation, Military 
Motor— Donovan and Moore 8 
Transport Service, 1917-1919, 
The History of the— Gleaves 19 
Trautwine— Civil Engineers’ 


Pocketbook . 8 

Trench Fighting, Tactics and 

Duties of —Bertrand . 29 

Trench Warfare —Moss . 31 

Tschappat —Ordnance and 

Gunnery . 23 

Tufts —Real Business of Living 24 
Turner and Fulmer —Battle 

Fire Training. 23 

Turner —Study of Fabrics ... 26 
Turn of the Tide, The —Wise 18 
Twine: 

Davison’s Cordage, Twine 

and Duck Trade. 28 

Twyford —Purchasing, Its Eco¬ 
nomic Aspects and Proper 

Methods . 28 

U 

United States Army, A His¬ 
tory of —Ganoe . 33 

United States Flag . 24 

University of Illinois Agri¬ 
cultural Experiment Station 
Bulletin No. 147, Market 
Classes and Grades of Meat 

—Hall . 26 

Vpdyke —The Diplomacy of 

the War of 1812. 12 

V 

Vandenburg —If Hamilton 

Were Here Today. 25 

Van Loon —The Story of Man¬ 
kind . 11 

Vast —Little History of the 

Great War. 16 

Vernois —Studies in the Lead¬ 
ing of Troops. 28 

Virginia Campaign of ’64 and 
’65, The; The Army of the 
Potomac and the Army of 

the James —Humphreys . 13 

Vivian, Marsh and Lockwood 
—History of Aeronautics... 4 
Vizetelly —A Desk-Book of 

Errors . 21 

-—Preparation of Manu¬ 
scripts for the Printer... 28 
von der Goltz —The Conduct 

of War. 6 

von Kluck —The March on Paris 
and the Battle of the Marne 18 
W 

Wagner —The Campaign of 

Koniggratz . 15 

Waite and McGowan —Textiles 

and Clothing. 26 

Waldron —Army Physical 

Training . 32 

—Terrain Exercises.... 20 

Waldron and Stewart —Thirty- 

Minute Talks. 32 

Wall, A .—The Banker’s Credit 

Manual . 10 

Wall, J. F .—As to Military 

Training . 30 

War According to Clausewitz 

—Pilcher . 5 

War and Revolution in Russia 

(1914-1917 )—Gourko . 18 

War, Art of . 5 

War Costs and Their Financ¬ 
ing —Bogart . 29 

War, Evolution, Causes, etc... 29 
Warfare, Chemical 7 

War in the Crimea, The 

—Hamley . 15 

War of 1812 . 12 

War of Independence, The 
—Fiske . . 11 


War of Positions, The — Azan 6 
War of the Future, The 

— Bernhardi . 33 

War Romance of the Salva¬ 
tion Army, The —Booth and 

Hill . 17 

Wars, See “History” . 10 

Wars of Marlborough, The 

— Tavlor . 14 

War With Mexico, The —Smith 12 
Wartenburq — Napoleon as a 

General . 14 

Washington, The Invasion of 

the City of —Stahl . 12 

Waterloo, The Campaign of 

— Ropes . 14 

Water Supply, Public— Tur- 

neaure and Russell . 9 

Water Transportation . 26 

Waterworks Handbook— Flinn, 

Weston and Bogart . 9 

Way to Victory, The— 

Gibbs . 18 

Wead — Professional Ques¬ 
tions and Answers for 

Naval Officers. 81 

We and Our Government 

— Jenks and Smith . 24 

We and Our History— Hart .. 24 
We and Our Work— Johnson.. 24 
Weaver — Military Explosives.. 24 
Weaves,Handbook of —Oelsner 26 

Webb — The Peninsula. 12 

Webster’s Collegiate Diction¬ 
ary . 21 

Webster’s New International 

Dictionary . 21 

Wells — The Outline of History 11 
—A Short History of the 
World . 10 


Weston, Bogart and Flinn 
—Waterworks Handbook... 9 
What Really Happened at 

Paris— House and Seymour 17 
Whelen —The American Rifle.. 23 
—Suggestions to Military 


Riflemen . 23 

Whitt all —With Botha and 

Smuts in Africa. 19 

Whitton —The Decisive Battles 

of Modern Times. 12 

Why Wars Come— Niblack... 29 
Wilhelm, Malony and Hatcher 
—Machine Guns (with Sup¬ 
plement, 1920). 30 

—Supplement to Machine 

Guns . 31 

Williams —Infantry Company 

Supply Manual. 30 

Wilson —Field Sanitation. 30 

Winning of the West, The 

Roosevelt . 25 

Wise —The Turn of the Tide 18 
Wisser —The Second Boer War 15 
With Botha and Smuts in 

Africa —Whittall . 19 

With the Russian Army (1914- 

1917 )—Knox . 18 

Wood, E .—Achievements of 

Cavalry . 6 

Wood, L. —America’s Duty... 12 
—The Military Obligation of 

Citizenship . 33 

Woodbury and Moss —Manual 

for Medical Officers. 30 

World War, See, “(3) World 
War”, under “History,” 

page 10 ) . 16 

Wright —At the Supreme War 

Council . 18 

Writer’s Handbook, The. 21 

Y 

Yates —Notes from the Front 31 
YoshLAki and Eastlake — 

Heroic Japan. 15 

Z 

Zahm —Aerial Navigation. 4 








































































(Tear along this line) 


ORDER BLANK 

Date. 

Book Department, 

The Quartermaster Association, 

1624 H Street N. W. 

Washington, D. C. 

Gentlemen: 

Please send the following books to the address 
given below: 

Title and author Price 


*If you are already a member of Total $. 

The Army Cooperative Book Club, 

or if this order amounts to $5 or *LESS 5% $. 

more, and is accompanied by re¬ 
mittance, you may deduct 5% Remittance $. 

from the total amount. However, 

if the order is not accompanied by remittance, no discount is 

allowed. See the other side of this order blank for full par¬ 
ticulars regarding the Army Cooperative Book Club. 


Remittance ($..) is enclosed. 

Send bill for total amount. 


Name 


(Please write plainly) 


Rank and Organization 


Address 













ARMY COOPERATIVE BOOK CLUB 


Defined. The Army Cooperative Book Club is a 
profit-sharing book service placed at the disposal 
of all individuals and organizations of the Army of 
the United States who are members of the Club. 

Conditions of Membership. Any individual or or¬ 
ganization of the Army of the United States—Regu¬ 
lar, National Guard, or Organized Reserves—order¬ 
ing $5 or more worth of BOOKS at one time auto¬ 
matically becomes a member of The Army Coopera¬ 
tive Book Club. 

Saving. Members of The Army Cooperative Book 
Club effect a saving of 5 per cent on all BOOKS, 
beginning with the first order of $5 or more, subject 
to the following special provisions, which are made 
to eliminate additional bookkeeping and other clerical 
expense: 

1. Remittances must accompany orders. 

2. The discount of 5 per cent must be deducted 
from amount of order by the member himself 
when the order is sent. 

(Note. The saving of 5 per cent is allowed on 
BOOKS only. Due to our narrow margin of profit 
on magazines and newspapers, we are unable to al¬ 
low this saving on periodicals. However, by means 
of attractive combination or clubbing offers, listed 
in a special catalog that will be furnished on request, 
members can save considerably more than 5 per cent 
in the case of many leading magazines.) 


ATTENTION!! 

ARE YOU A SUBSCRIBER? 

DO YOU SUPPORT THE ONLY SERVICE 

I PAPER THAT CONSISTENTLY AD¬ 

VOCATES YOUR CAUSE? 

The 

&rmp anii J|abj> Register 

has been published since 1879 
at 

WASHINGTON, D. C. 
headquarters of all services. 

The following is from a major of Infantry, 
on duty at St. Louis, Mo.: 

“Enclosed please find check for $4 in renewal of my 
subscription. This is one bill that it certainly is a 
pleasure to pay. Let me congratulate you on the good 
work you have been doing for the services in the past 
and assure you of my confidence that you will continue 
to do so in the future.” 

SUBSCRIPTION, $4.00 PER ANNUM 

Make Remittances to Army and Navy Pub¬ 
lishing Company 

511 11th St. N. W., Washington, D. C. 


Better Than Ever 


Since the war, important improvements have been 
made in the Corona typewriter. It is now built in 
two models— 

28 Key Model 

With two pairs of shift keys 
Full ten-inch carriage 
Automatic ribbon reverse 
Self-spacing carriage return 

30 Key Model 

With all of the above features and the added advantage 
of six extra characters. 

Regularly equipped with keyboards for: 

Engineers, Chemists, Physicians, 

Optometrists and for all language— 
including Yiddish. 

Ask about XC International Keyboard. Eight lan¬ 
guages on the one machine. 


Corona Typewriter Co. 















LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 


0 027 133 178 2 


HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN CO. 


takes pleasure in calling the attention of 
Army officers to the large number of 
their books included in this catalogue, 
and particularly to the five following 
works, each of which is new, important, 
and essential to the well-rounded mili¬ 
tary bookshelf: 


HISTORY OF THE GREAT WAR 
John Buchan 


“Unbiased, authentic, readable ... a very valuable ad¬ 
dition to the library shelves of officers and military or¬ 
ganizations .”—Quartermaster Review . 4 vols.$20.00 


MY RHINELAND JOURNAL 
General Henry T. Allen 


“Honest, intelligent, first-hand, well-rounded opinions 
couched in plain language.”—-Boston Transcript -$8.00 


INDUSTRIAL AMERICA IN THE 
WORLD WAR 
Grosvenor B. Clarkson 


“His intimate connection with the events he records, 
and the detailed information that he has obtained di¬ 
rectly from the leading individuals concerned, makes 
the book a noteworthy record of this particular phase 
of the great drama .”—General Pershing .$6.00 


DECISIVE BATTLES OF 
MODERN TIMES 
Lt. Col. F. E. Whitton 


“Lucidity of thought and profundity of knowledge make 
che accounts both authoritative and intensely read¬ 
able .”—Army and Navy Journal .$8.50 


FROM PRIVATE TO FIELD 
MARSHAL 

Sir William Robertson 


“A record of achievement and a personal history of 
value to all military men. It shows the details of staff 
organization and administration and the necessity for 
understanding war on broad and general lines.”— 
Military Surgeon .$5.00 


A Copy of Our Cata¬ 
logue will Gladly be 
Sent on Request 



Address Houghton 
Mifflin Co., No. 2 
Park St. Boston 















